Abstract
Although a potent irreversible inhibitor of high-affinity choline transport in rat brain synaptosomes, choline mustard aziridinium ion (ChM Az) appeared to be a relatively weak inhibitor of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) in rat brain homogenates, and evidence for irreversible binding of this compound to the enzyme had not been established. Accordingly, the irreversible inactivation of partially purified rat brain ChAT by ChM Az was studied. This compound is a rather weak inhibitor of the enzyme, with 50% inhibition of ChAT activity achieved following 30 min incubation at 37 degrees C with 0.6 mM ChM Az. This result indicates that although ChM Az has affinity for many nucleophiles there was little diluting effect of the inhibitor in the crude brain homogenate which could be attributed to such reactions (50% inhibition caused by 1.8 mM ChM Az following 10 min incubation). Although the initial binding of ChM Az to ChAT may be of a competitive nature, irreversible bond formation resulted. The time-dependent alkylation reaction conformed to pseudo-first-order kinetics with an observed forward rate constant (kobs) of 0.173 min-1; the half-time (t 1/2) for irreversible binding was about 4 min. The irreversible inactivation of ChAT by ChM Az would appear to be slower than the alkylation of high-affinity choline carriers in synaptosomes by this compound, and the relatively weak inhibitory action of ChM Az against either partially purified ChAT or ChAT activity in crude rat brain homogenates is in striking contrast to previous evidence that ChAT in intact synaptosomes was inhibited irreversibly by lower concentrations of the inhibitor.
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