| Literature DB >> 27654152 |
Maja Katalinić1, Nikolina Maček Hrvat1, Krešimir Baumann2, Sara Morasi Piperčić2, Sandro Makarić2, Srđanka Tomić2, Ozren Jović2, Tomica Hrenar2, Ante Miličević1, Dubravko Jelić3, Suzana Žunec1, Ines Primožič4, Zrinka Kovarik5.
Abstract
A well-considered treatment of acute nerve agents poisoning involves the exogenous administration of butyrylcholinesterase (BChE, EC 3.1.1.8) as a stoichiometric bioscavenger efficient in preventing cholinergic crises caused by acetylcholinesterase (AChE, EC 3.1.1.7) inhibition. An additional improvement in medical countermeasures would be to use oximes that could reactivate BChE as well to upgrade bioscavenging from stoichiometric to oxime-assisted catalytic. Therefore, in this paper we investigated the potency of 39 imidazolium and benzimidazolium oximes (36 compounds synthesized for the first time) to be considered as the reactivators specifically designed for reactivation of phosphylated human BChE. Their efficiency in the reactivation of paraoxon-, VX-, and tabun-inhibited human BChE, as well as human AChE was tested and compared with the efficiencies of HI-6 and obidoxime, used in medical practice today. A comprehensive analysis was performed for the most promising oximes defining kinetic parameters of reactivation as well as interactions with uninhibited BChE. Furthermore, experimental data were compared with computational studies (docking, QSAR analysis) as a starting point in future oxime structure refinement. Considering the strict criteria set for in vivo applications, we determined the cytotoxicity of lead oximes on two cell lines. Among the tested oxime library, one imidazolium compound was selected for preliminary in vivo antidotal study in mice. The obtained protection in VX poisoning outlines its potential in development oxime-assisted OP-bioscavenging with BChE.Entities:
Keywords: Antidotes; Benzimidazole oximes; Butyrylcholinesterase; Imidazole oximes; Nerve agents; Reactivation
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27654152 DOI: 10.1016/j.taap.2016.09.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxicol Appl Pharmacol ISSN: 0041-008X Impact factor: 4.219