We have crystallized Drosophila melanogaster
acetylcholinesterase and solved the structure of the native
enzyme and of its complexes with two potent reversible inhibitors,
1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-N-(phenylmethyl)-9-acridinamine and
1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-N-(3-iodophenyl-methyl)-9-acridinamine—all
three at 2.7 Å resolution. The refined structure
of D. melanogaster acetylcholinesterase is similar
to that of vertebrate acetylcholinesterases, for example,
human, mouse, and fish, in its overall fold, charge distribution,
and deep active-site gorge, but some of the surface loops
deviate by up to 8 Å from their position in the vertebrate
structures, and the C-terminal helix is shifted substantially.
The active-site gorge of the insect enzyme is significantly
narrower than that of Torpedo californica AChE,
and its trajectory is shifted several angstroms. The volume
of the lower part of the gorge of the insect enzyme is
∼50% of that of the vertebrate enzyme. Upon binding
of either of the two inhibitors, nine aromatic side chains
within the active-site gorge change their conformation
so as to interact with the inhibitors. Some differences
in activity and specificity between the insect and vertebrate
enzymes can be explained by comparison of their three-dimensional
structures.