Hou_2019_Drug.Alcohol.Depend_202_168

Reference

Title : Evaluation of the cholinesterase activity of a potential therapeutic cocaine esterase for cocaine overdose - Hou_2019_Drug.Alcohol.Depend_202_168
Author(s) : Hou S , Zhang Y , Zhu Y , Zhang C , Kong Y , Chen X , Chen R , Yin X , Xie T
Ref : Drug Alcohol Depend , 202 :168 , 2019
Abstract :

BACKGROUND: Cocaine is a commonly abused drug and there is no approved medication specifically to treat its addiction or overdose. Bacterial cocaine esterase (CocE)-derived RBP-8000 is currently under clinical development for cocaine overdose treatment. It is proven to be effective for human use to accelerate cocaine metabolism into physiologically inactive products. Besides cocaine, RBP-8000 may hydrolyze the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh), however, no study has reported its cholinesterase activity. The present study aims to examine RBP-8000's cholinesterase activity and substrate selectivity to address the potential concern that this enzyme therapy might produce cholinergic side-effects. METHODS: Both computational modeling and experimental kinetic analysis were carried out to characterize the potential cholinesterase activity of RBP-8000. Substrates interacting with RBP-8000 were modeled for their enzyme-substrate binding complexes. In vitro enzymatic kinetic parameters were measured using Ellman's colorimetric assay and analyzed by Michaelis-Menten kinetics. RESULTS: It is the first demonstration that RBP-8000 catalyzes the hydrolysis of acetylthiocholine (ATC). However, its catalytic efficiency (kcat/KM) against ATC is 1000-fold and 5000-fold lower than it against cocaine at 25 degrees C and 37 degrees C, respectively, suggesting RBP-8000 has the desired substrate selectivity for cocaine over ACh. CONCLUSION: Given the fact that clinically relevant dose of RBP-8000 displays insignificant cholinesterase activity relative to endogenous cholinesterases in human, administration of RBP-8000 is unlikely to produce any significant cholinergic side-effects. This study provides supplemental evidences in support of further development of RBP-8000 towards a clinically used pharmacotherapy for cocaine overdose.

PubMedSearch : Hou_2019_Drug.Alcohol.Depend_202_168
PubMedID: 31352306

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Citations formats

Hou S, Zhang Y, Zhu Y, Zhang C, Kong Y, Chen X, Chen R, Yin X, Xie T (2019)
Evaluation of the cholinesterase activity of a potential therapeutic cocaine esterase for cocaine overdose
Drug Alcohol Depend 202 :168

Hou S, Zhang Y, Zhu Y, Zhang C, Kong Y, Chen X, Chen R, Yin X, Xie T (2019)
Drug Alcohol Depend 202 :168