4.8 Article

Tuning Butyrylcholinesterase Inactivation and Reactivation by Polymer-Based Protein Engineering

Journal

ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/advs.201901904

Keywords

atom transfer radical polymerization; butyrylcholinesterase; organophosphate nerve agents; oximes; protein-polymer conjugates

Funding

  1. DTRA grant [HDTRA1-18-1-0028 Carnegie Mellon FRBAA14-BR-TA7-G19-2-0124]
  2. NSF [CHE-0130903, CHE-1039870, CHE-1726525]

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Organophosphate nerve agents rapidly inhibit cholinesterases thereby destroying the ability to sustain life. Strong nucleophiles, such as oximes, have been used as therapeutic reactivators of cholinesterase-organophosphate complexes, but suffer from short half-lives and limited efficacy across the broad spectrum of organophosphate nerve agents. Cholinesterases have been used as long-lived therapeutic bioscavengers for unreacted organophosphates with limited success because they react with organophosphate nerve agents with one-to-one stoichiometries. The chemical power of nucleophilic reactivators is coupled to long-lived bioscavengers by designing and synthesizing cholinesterase-polymer-oxime conjugates using atom transfer radical polymerization and azide-alkyne click chemistry. Detailed kinetic studies show that butyrylcholinesterase-polymer-oxime activity is dependent on the electrostatic properties of the polymers and the amount of oxime within the conjugate. The covalent coupling of oxime-containing polymers to the surface of butyrylcholinesterase slows the rate of inactivation of paraoxon, a model nerve agent. Furthermore, when the enzyme is covalently inhibited by paraoxon, the covalently attached oxime induced inter- and intramolecular reactivation. Intramolecular reactivation will open the door to the generation of a new class of nerve agent scavengers that couple the speed and selectivity of biology to the ruggedness and simplicity of synthetic chemicals.

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