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. 1998 Apr 17;273(16):9812-20.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.273.16.9812.

Identification of a novel type of alternatively spliced exon from the acetylcholinesterase gene of Bungarus fasciatus. Molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase in the snake liver and muscle

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Identification of a novel type of alternatively spliced exon from the acetylcholinesterase gene of Bungarus fasciatus. Molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase in the snake liver and muscle

X Cousin et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

The venom of the snake Bungarus fasciatus contains a hydrophilic, monomeric species of acetylcholinesterase (AChE), characterized by a C-terminal region that does not resemble the alternative T- or H-peptides. Here, we show that the snake contains a single gene for AChE, possessing a novel alternative exon (S) that encodes the C-terminal region of the venom enzyme, located downstream of the T exon. Alternative splicing generates S mRNA in the venom gland and S and T mRNAs in muscle and liver. We found no evidence for the presence of an H exon between the last common "catalytic" exon and the T exon, where H exons are located in Torpedo and in mammals. Moreover, COS cells that were transfected with AChE expression vectors containing the T exon with or without the preceding genomic region produced exclusively AChET subunits. In the snake tissues, we could not detect any glycophosphatidylinositol-anchored AChE form that would have derived from H subunits. In the liver, the cholinesterase activity comprises both AChE and butyrylcholinesterase components; butyrylcholinesterase corresponds essentially to nonamphiphilic tetramers and AChE to nonamphiphilic monomers (G1na). In muscle, AChE is largely predominant: it consists of globular forms (G1a and G4a) and trace amounts of asymmetric forms (A8 and A12), which derive from AChET subunits. Thus, the Bungarus AChE gene possesses alternatively spliced T and S exons but no H exon; the absence of an H exon may be a common feature of AChE genes in reptiles and birds.

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