Molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase present in the white and grey matter of pig brain. 1981

M S Chai, and C A Reavill, and C J Vidal, and D T Plummer
Department of Biochemistry, Chelsea College, University of London, Manresa Road, London SW3 6LX, U.K.

Extraction of the white matter of pig brain with EDTA, lysolecithin or Triton X-100 gave poor yields of soluble acetylcholinesterase although these agents had proved effective at solubilizing the enzyme in the grey matter. This finding, together with the observation that the strong detergent sodium deoxycholate, was needed to solubilize the enzyme, shows that it is more difficult to remove acetylcholinesterase from the white matter of brain than from the grey. This could mean that the enzyme in the white matter is more firmly bound to the membrane than the enzyme in the grey matter. The difference in binding of the enzyme from the two regions of the brain is also reflected in the affinity chromatography experiments which showed a lower recovery for the acetylcholinesterase of white matter compared with the enzyme from grey matter. Starch-block electrophoresis of acetylcholinesterase showed a single negatively charged peak of activity for both the naturally soluble and the deoxycholate solubilized preparations. The presence of only one form on electrophoresis suggests that the molecular species of acetylcholinesterase do not arise from differences in charge. Sucrose density gradient centrifugation of the two preparations from white matter gave a single peak of activity with a sedimentation constant of about 10 S. This corresponds closely to the major species of molecular weight 260,000 detected by gradient gel electrophoresis. Other forms detected in both enzyme preparations by gradient gel electrophoresis were species with molecular weights of 660,000, 180,000, 130,000 and 115,000. The significance of these species in terms of the formation of oligomers is discussed. A comparison was made with the corresponding preparations of acetylcholinesterase from the grey matter and the results showed that acetylcholinesterase from the white and grey matter of pig brain were very similar. The exception to this was the species with a molecular weight of 68,000 which was present in the grey but not the white matter of pig brain.

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