Publication | Closed Access
Enzymatic Hydrolysis of the Chemical Warfare Agent VX and its Neurotoxic Analogues by Organophosphorus Hydrolase
89
Citations
15
References
1997
Year
Bacterial EnzymeChemical Warfare AgentPeptide ScienceChemical AgentChemical BiologyEnzymatic ModificationRedox BiologyEnzyme BiocatalysisdetoxificationneurotoxinsMolecular PharmacologyToxicologyEnzymatic HydrolysisStructure-function Enzyme KineticsBiochemistryOrganophosphorus HydrolaseBiocatalysisPharmacologyAbstractorganophosphorus HydrolaseNatural SciencesEnzyme CatalysisMedicineNeurotoxic Analogues
AbstractOrganophosphorus hydrolase (OPH) is a bacterial enzyme that hydrolyzes a variety of organophosphorus (OP) neurotoxins, including many widely used pesticides and chemical warfare agents containing P-O, P-F, P-CN and P-S bonds. It has extremely high efficiency in hydrolysis of many different phosphotriester and phosphothiolester pesticides (P-O bond) such as paraoxon (kcat3800s−1) and coumaphos (kcat = 800s−1) or phosphonate (P-F) neurotoxins such as DFP (kcat = 350s−1) and the chemical warfare agent sarin (kcat = 56s−1). In contrast, the enzyme has much lower catalytic capabilities for phosphonothioate neurotoxins such as acephate (kcat = 2.8 s−1) or the chemical warfare agent VX [O-ethyl S-(2-diisopropyl-aminoethyl) methylphosphonothioate] (kcat = 0.3s−1). This lower specificity for VX and its analogues are reflected by the specificity constants (kcat/Km values) for VX = 0.75 × 103 M−1 s−1 compared to 5.5 × 107M−1 s−1 for paraoxon. Different metal-associated forms of the enzyme demonstrated significantly varying hydrolytic capabilities for VX and its analogues, and the activity of OPH (Co+2) was consistently higher than that of OPH (Zn+2) by five to twenty fold. Hydrolysis of the P-S bonds was determined by monitoring the formation of free -SH groups, and the specific cleavage of the P-S bond was verified by 31P NMR analysis.Key Words: Enzyme biocatalysisDetoxificationNeurotoxins
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1