Nagasawa T, Mori N, Tani Y, Ogata K
J Antibiot (Tokyo). 1976 May;29(5):526-31. doi: 10.7164/antibiotics.29.526.
A screening aimed at obtaining a cholinesterase inhibitor of microbial origin was carried out using Pseudomonas butyrylcholinesterase. A mycelium-extract of a fungus strain, belonging to the genus Penicillium, was found to produce such an enzyme inhibitor. The inhibitor was purified and crystallized as colorless leaflets. From physical and chemical studies, the inhibitor was identified as being identical with an antibiotic, mycelianamide, though this compound was not known to have enzyme inhibitor activity. The kinetics of the inhibition of Pseudomonas butyrylcholinesterase were also studied. Horse serum cholinesterase and hog liver carboxylesterase were also inhibited by the isolated Penicillium C-81 inhibitor, but lipase and acetylcholinesterase were not.