A method for the efficient evaluation of substrate-based cholinesterase imaging probes for Alzheimer's disease

Cholinesterase (ChE) enzymes have been identified as diagnostic markers for Alzheimer disease (AD). Substrate-based probes have been synthesised to detect ChEs but they have not detected changes in ChE distribution associated with AD pathology. Probes are typically screened using spectrophotometric...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sultan Darvesh (Author), Scott Banfield (Author), Maeve Dufour (Author), Katrina L. Forrestall (Author), Hillary Maillet (Author), G. Andrew Reid (Author), Dane Sands (Author), Ian R. Pottie (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Taylor & Francis Group, 2023-12-01T00:00:00Z.
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Summary:Cholinesterase (ChE) enzymes have been identified as diagnostic markers for Alzheimer disease (AD). Substrate-based probes have been synthesised to detect ChEs but they have not detected changes in ChE distribution associated with AD pathology. Probes are typically screened using spectrophotometric methods with pure enzyme for specificity and kinetics. However, the biochemical properties of ChEs associated with AD pathology are altered. The present work was undertaken to determine whether the Karnovsky-Roots (KR) histochemical method could be used to evaluate probes at the site of pathology. Thirty thioesters and esters were synthesised and evaluated using enzyme kinetic and KR methods. Spectrophotometric methods demonstrated all thioesters were ChE substrates, yet only a few provided staining in the brain with the KR method. Esters were ChE substrates with interactions with brain ChEs. These results suggest that the KR method may provide an efficient means to screen compounds as probes for imaging AD-associated ChEs.
Item Description:10.1080/14756366.2023.2225797
1475-6374
1475-6366