Brim_2010_Mol.Pharmacol_77_593

Reference

Title : A thermally stable form of bacterial cocaine esterase: a potential therapeutic agent for treatment of cocaine abuse - Brim_2010_Mol.Pharmacol_77_593
Author(s) : Brim RL , Nance MR , Youngstrom DW , Narasimhan D , Zhan CG , Tesmer JJ , Sunahara RK , Woods JH
Ref : Molecular Pharmacology , 77 :593 , 2010
Abstract :

Rhodococcal cocaine esterase (CocE) is an attractive potential treatment for both cocaine overdose and cocaine addiction. CocE directly degrades cocaine into inactive products, whereas traditional small-molecule approaches require blockade of the inhibitory action of cocaine on a diverse array of monoamine transporters and ion channels. The usefulness of wild-type (wt) cocaine esterase is hampered by its inactivation at 37 degrees C. Herein, we characterize the most thermostable form of this enzyme to date, CocE-L169K/G173Q. In vitro kinetic analyses reveal that CocE-L169K/G173Q displays a half-life of 2.9 days at 37 degrees C, which represents a 340-fold improvement over wt and is 15-fold greater than previously reported mutants. Crystallographic analyses of CocE-L169K/G173Q, determined at 1.6-A resolution, suggest that stabilization involves enhanced domain-domain interactions involving van der Waals interactions and hydrogen bonding. In vivo rodent studies reveal that intravenous pretreatment with CocE-L169K/G173Q in mice provides protection from cocaine-induced lethality for longer time periods before cocaine administration than wt CocE. Furthermore, intravenous administration (pretreatment) of CocE-L169K/G173Q prevents self-administration of cocaine in a time-dependent manner. Termination of the in vivo effects of CoCE seems to be dependent on, but not proportional to, its clearance from plasma as its half-life is approximately 2.3 h and similar to that of wt CocE (2.2 h). Taken together these data suggest that CocE-L169K/G173Q possesses many of the properties of a biological therapeutic for treating cocaine abuse but requires additional development to improve its serum half-life.

PubMedSearch : Brim_2010_Mol.Pharmacol_77_593
PubMedID: 20086035
Gene_locus related to this paper: rhosm-cocE

Related information

Inhibitor DTT-adduct
Gene_locus rhosm-cocE
Structure 3IDA

Citations formats

Brim RL, Nance MR, Youngstrom DW, Narasimhan D, Zhan CG, Tesmer JJ, Sunahara RK, Woods JH (2010)
A thermally stable form of bacterial cocaine esterase: a potential therapeutic agent for treatment of cocaine abuse
Molecular Pharmacology 77 :593

Brim RL, Nance MR, Youngstrom DW, Narasimhan D, Zhan CG, Tesmer JJ, Sunahara RK, Woods JH (2010)
Molecular Pharmacology 77 :593