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Type B carboxylesterases (acetylcholinesterases, neuropathy target esterase, serine peptidases), catalyse the hydrolysis of carboxyl-ester substrates by formation of a covalent acyl-enzyme intermediate and subsequent cleavage and release of the acyl group. Organophosphorus compounds, carbamates, and others exert their mechanism of neurotoxicity by permanent covalent organophosphorylation or carbamylation at the catalytic site of carboxylesterases. Classical kinetic studies converted the exponential kinetic equation to a logarithmic equation for graphic analysis. This process, however, does not allow analysing complex situations. In this paper, kinetic model equations are reviewed and strategies developed for the following cases: (a) single enzyme, with classical linear equation; (b) multi-enzymatic system-discriminating several inhibitor-sensitive and inhibitor-resistant components; (c) 'ongoing inhibition'-high sensitive enzymes can be significantly inhibited during the substrate reaction time, the model equations need a correction; (d) spontaneous reactivation (de-phosphorylation)-one or several components can be simultaneously inhibited and spontaneously reactivated; (e) spontaneous reactivation from starting time with the enzyme being partly or totally inhibited; (f) aging-single enzyme can be inhibited, spontaneously reactivated and dealkylating reaction ('aging') simultaneously occurs; and (g) aging and spontaneous reactivation from starting time with the enzyme being partly or totally inhibited. Analysis of data using the suggested equations allows the deduction of inhibition kinetic constants and the proportions of each of the enzymatic components. Strategies for practical application of the models and for obtaining consistent kinetic parameters, using multi-steps approaches or 3D fitting, are presented.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10408440802412309 | DOI Listing |
Phys Chem Chem Phys
September 2025
School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Yangzhou University, 180 Siwangting Road, Yangzhou 225002, People's Republic of China.
Surface state modulation has emerged as a promising strategy to reduce rapid carrier recombination in photocatalytic reactions. However, surface states can paradoxically serve as indirect recombination centers due to sluggish interfacial reaction kinetics. Herein, the charge separation function of Ni-mediated surface states is reactivated Z-scheme charge transfer engineering in FeO/CuO heterojunctions, where the surface states spontaneously accumulate photoinduced electrons for efficient photocatalytic hydrogen production.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Med (Lausanne)
August 2025
Department of Respiratory Medicine, Jichi Medical University, Tochigi, Japan.
Sarcoidosis, a systemic granulomatous disease of unknown etiology, is characterized by the formation of non-caseating granulomas affecting multiple organs. Accumulating evidence implicates (; formerly ) as a potential microbial trigger. The consistent detection of within sarcoid granulomas, along with associated Th1-polarized immune responses, indicates that latent intracellular persistence and reactivation of this commensal bacterium may drive granulomatous inflammation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Biol
August 2025
Department of Neuropsychology, Faculty of Psychology, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany.
Involuntary memory retrieval is a hallmark symptom of posttraumatic stress disorder and a frequent phenomenon in everyday autobiographical memory. However, the neural mechanisms that drive involuntary retrieval remain unclear. This study aims to elucidate how involuntary retrieval spontaneously initiates memory reactivation and how the reactivated neural representations differ in their content, distinctiveness and temporal compression from voluntary retrieval.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirology
October 2025
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Lebanon, NH, USA. Electronic address:
Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) establishes latent infections in sensory neurons, from which HSV sporadically reactivates, often due to external stress and other stimuli. Latency and reactivation are studied using in vivo models in a variety of hosts, as well as in vitro models including primary mouse neurons, and neurons derived from human pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). The interferon (IFN)-based neuronal innate immune response is critical in controlling HSV-1 replication and HSV-1 counters these responses, in part, through infected-cell protein 34.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
July 2025
Department of Pathobiological Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison WI.
Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected rhesus macaques are valuable models for HIV cure research, offering insights into tissue reservoirs and testing reservoir-reduction strategies. Despite this utility, low frequencies of latently infected cells limit mechanistic studies of viral latency latency models have addressed this limitation for HIV, advancing our understanding of viral persistence. However, no comparable models exist for SIV.
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