Abstract

Serum Paraoxonase 2 (PON2) level is a potential biomarker owing to its association with a number of pathophysiological conditions such as atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease. Since cholinergic deficiency is closely linked with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) progression, acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) are the treatment of choice for patients with AD. However, there is a heterogenous response to these drugs and mostly the subjects do not respond to the treatment. Gene polymorphism, the simultaneous occurrence of two or more discontinuous alleles in a population, could be one of the important factors for this. Hence, we hypothesized that PON2 and its polymorphic forms may be hydrolyzing the AChEIs differently, and thus, different patients respond differently. To investigate this, two AChEIs, donepezil hydrochloride (DHC) and pyridostigmine bromide (PB), were selected. Human PON2 wildtype gene and four mutants, two catalytic sites, and two polymorphic sites were cloned, recombinantly expressed, and purified for in vitro analysis. Enzyme activity and AChE activity were measured to quantitate the amount of DHC and PB hydrolyzed by the wildtype and the mutant proteins. Herein, PON2 esterase activity and AChE inhibitor efficiency were found to be inversely related. A significant difference in enzyme activity of the catalytic site mutants was observed as compared to the wildtype, and subsequent AChE activity showed that esterase activity of PON2 is responsible for the hydrolysis of DHC and PB. Interestingly, PON2 polymorphic site mutants showed increased esterase activity; therefore, this could be the reason for the ineffectiveness of the drugs. Thus, our data suggested that the esterase activity of PON2 was mainly responsible for the hydrolysis of AChEI, DHC, and PB, and that might be responsible for the variation in individual response to AChEI therapy.

Highlights

  • The paraoxonase (PON) family comprises three genes, PON1, Paraoxonase 2 (PON2), and PON3, which are calcium-bound hydrolases, and are related to several diseases [1, 2]

  • The model structure of HuPON2 was prepared from the Chi-PON1 (PDB:1V04) crystal structure

  • Several factors may modify the response to treatment, gene polymorphism is one among them

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Summary

Introduction

The paraoxonase (PON) family comprises three genes, PON1, PON2, and PON3, which are calcium-bound hydrolases, and are related to several diseases [1, 2]. Association between human paraoxonase 2 and efficacy of drugs used against Alzheimer’s disease lactonases and differ in substrate specificities [3, 4]. PON1 is the most studied among the three PONs due to its multifactorial role in organophosphate (OP) metabolism, cardiovascular disease (CVD), and the presence of relevant polymorphisms [5, 6]. Understanding the catalytic mechanism of an enzyme is important in developing it for therapeutic purpose, and provide insights into the efficacy of prescribing drugs [9, 10]

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