To obtain information about the evolution of acetylcholinesterase (AChE), we undertook a study of the enzyme from the skeletal muscle of the lamprey Petromyzon marinus, a primitive vertebrate. We found that the cholinesterase activity of lamprey muscle is due to AChE, not pseudocholinesterase; the enzyme was inhibited by 1,5-bis(4-allyldimethylammonium phenyl) pentane-3-one (BW284C51), but not by tetramonoisopropyl pyrophosphortetramide (iso-OMPA) or ethopropazine. Also, the enzyme had a high affinity for acetylthiocholine and was inhibited by high concentrations of substrate. A large fraction of the AChE was found to be glycoprotein, since it was precipitated by concanavalin A-agarose. Optimal extraction of AChE was obtained in a high-salt detergent-containing buffer; fractional amounts of enzyme were extracted in buffers lacking salt and/or detergent. These data suggest that globular and asymmetric forms of AChE are present. On sucrose gradients, enzyme that was extracted in high-salt detergent-containing buffer sedimented as a broad peak of activity corresponding to G4; additionally, there was usually a peak corresponding to A12. Sequential extraction of AChE in conjunction with velocity sedimentation resolved minor forms of AChE and revealed that the G1, G2, G4, A4, A8, and A12 forms of AChE could be obtained from the muscle. The identity of the forms was confirmed through high-salt precipitation and collagenase digestion. The asymmetric forms of AChE were precipitated in low ionic strength buffer, and their sedimentation coefficients were shifted to higher values by collagenase digestion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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