| Literature DB >> 6285223 |
Abstract
The effects of beta-endorphin (lipotropin 61-91) and related naturally-occurring peptides upon acetylcholinesterase activity in rat hind-limb muscles was investigated. beta-endorphin weakly inhibited the activity in a plasma membrane-enriched fraction. The inhibition by beta-endorphin of the membrane-associated acetylcholinesterase was less marked when the fractions were prepared from muscles which had been denervated 4-6 days previously. The membrane-associated acetylcholinesterase was solubilised from normal muscle preparations and separated by sucrose density gradient centrifugation into three major peaks (16S, 10S and 4S). beta-Endorphin inhibited the activity in the 16S peak but not that in the 10S and 4S peaks, whilst tensilon, a competitive inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase, inhibited the activity of all three peaks. beta-Endorphin inhibited the activity in the 16S peak but not that in the 10S and 4S peaks, whilst tensilon, a competitive inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase, inhibited the activity of all three peaks. beta-Endorphin inhibited the 16S activity in a concentration-dependent manner and its action was partly prevented if naloxone was added simultaneously. Purified natural porcine and bovine beta-endorphin were equipotent in terms of effective concentration range but the maximum inhibition was greater with the bovine peptide. beta-Lipotropin was approximately 4 times less potent than beta-endorphin, whilst C-fragment (lipotropin 61-87) was 100 times less potent. Prolonged treatment with collagenase did not reduce the catalytic activity of 16S acetylcholinesterase, but it was no longer susceptible to the inhibitory action of beta-endorphin. Kinetic studies indicated a complex type of inhibition by beta-endorphin (hyperbolic Lineweaver-Burke plot). Methionine enkephalin inhibited acetylcholinesterase in a weakly non-competitive manner and its action was not abolished if the enzyme was predigested with collagenase. beta-Endorphin produces a novel form of inhibition of acetylcholinesterase, acting only on the 16S (A12 or 'motor endplate-specific') form of the enzyme. The findings are discussed in the light of evidence that beta-endorphin-related immunoreactivity is expressed in motor nerve axons in the immature rat.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1982 PMID: 6285223 DOI: 10.1016/0306-4522(82)90057-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroscience ISSN: 0306-4522 Impact factor: 3.590