Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2580575 Chemico-Biological Interactions 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Scavenging nerve agents in the blood is at the basis of new medical counter-measures.•Human butyrylcholinesterase is the leading stoichiometric bioscavenger.•Human paraoxonase 1 is the leading catalytic bioscavenger.•Focus is on production, catalytic optimization and pharmacokinetics of bioscavengers.•Proof of concept of gene-delivery of bioscavengers has been established.

Acetylcholinesterase is the physiological target for acute toxicity of nerve agents. Attempts to protect acetylcholinesterase from phosphylation by nerve agents, is currently achieved by reversible inhibitors that transiently mask the enzyme active site. This approach either protects only peripheral acetylcholinesterase or may cause side effects. Thus, an alternative strategy consists in scavenging nerve agents in the bloodstream before they can reach acetylcholinesterase. Pre- or post-exposure administration of bioscavengers, enzymes that neutralize and detoxify organophosphorus molecules, is one of the major developments of new medical counter-measures. These enzymes act either as stoichiometric or catalytic bioscavengers.Human butyrylcholinesterase is the leading stoichiometric bioscavenger. Current efforts are devoted to its mass production with care to pharmacokinetic properties of the final product for extended lifetime. Development of specific reactivators of phosphylated butyrylcholinesterase, or variants with spontaneous reactivation activity is also envisioned for rapid in situ regeneration of the scavenger.Human paraoxonase 1 is the leading catalytic bioscavenger under development. Research efforts focus on improving its catalytic efficiency toward the most toxic isomers of nerve agents, by means of directed evolution-based strategies. Human prolidase appears to be another promising human enzyme. Other non-human efficient enzymes like bacterial phosphotriesterases or squid diisopropylfluorophosphatase are also considered though their intrinsic immunogenic properties remain challenging for use in humans. Encapsulation, PEGylation and other modifications are possible solutions to address this problem as well as that of their limited lifetime.Finally, gene therapy for in situ generation and delivery of bioscavengers is for the far future, but its proof of concept has been established.

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Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
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