Carmona_2005_Eur.J.Pharmacol_517_186

Reference

Title : Intravenous butyrylcholinesterase administration and plasma and brain levels of cocaine and metabolites in rats - Carmona_2005_Eur.J.Pharmacol_517_186
Author(s) : Carmona GN , Schindler CW , Greig NH , Holloway HW , Jufer RA , Cone EJ , Gorelick DA
Ref : European Journal of Pharmacology , 517 :186 , 2005
Abstract :

Butyrylcholinesterase is a major cocaine-metabolizing enzyme in humans and other primates, catalyzing hydrolysis to ecgonine methylester. Increasing butyrylcholinesterase activity may be a treatment for cocaine addiction. We evaluated the effect of 30-min pretreatment with horse-derived butyrylcholinesterase (5-15,000 U i.v.) or with the selective butyrylcholinesterase inhibitor cymserine (10 mg/kg i.v.) on the metabolism of cocaine (17 mg/kg i.p.) in anesthetized rats. Venous blood samples were collected for two hours after cocaine administration and later assayed for cocaine and metabolites by gas chromatography/mass spectroscopy. Whole brains were collected after the last blood sample and similarly assayed. Butyrylcholinesterase significantly increased plasma and brain ecgonine methylester levels and decreased cocaine plasma half-life from 26.2 min (saline) to 16.4 min (15,000 U). Butyrylcholinesterase had no significant effect on plasma or brain cocaine or benzoylecgonine levels. Cymserine had no effect on any variable. These findings suggest that butyrylcholinesterase treatment may have benefits in enhancing cocaine metabolism and in increasing levels of ecgonine methylester, which may have a protective action against cocaine.

PubMedSearch : Carmona_2005_Eur.J.Pharmacol_517_186
PubMedID: 15967428

Related information

Inhibitor Cymserine

Citations formats

Carmona GN, Schindler CW, Greig NH, Holloway HW, Jufer RA, Cone EJ, Gorelick DA (2005)
Intravenous butyrylcholinesterase administration and plasma and brain levels of cocaine and metabolites in rats
European Journal of Pharmacology 517 :186

Carmona GN, Schindler CW, Greig NH, Holloway HW, Jufer RA, Cone EJ, Gorelick DA (2005)
European Journal of Pharmacology 517 :186