Murthy_2016_J.Pharmacol.Exp.Ther_356_720

Reference

Title : Cocaine Hydrolase Gene Transfer Demonstrates Cardiac Safety and Efficacy against Cocaine-Induced QT Prolongation in Mice - Murthy_2016_J.Pharmacol.Exp.Ther_356_720
Author(s) : Murthy V , Reyes S , Geng L , Gao Y , Brimijoin S
Ref : Journal of Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics , 356 :720 , 2016
Abstract :

Cocaine addiction is associated with devastating medical consequences, including cardiotoxicity and risk-conferring prolongation of the QT interval. Viral gene transfer of cocaine hydrolase engineered from butyrylcholinesterase offers therapeutic promise for treatment-seeking drug users. Although previous preclinical studies have demonstrated benefits of this strategy without signs of toxicity, the specific cardiac safety and efficacy of engineered butyrylcholinesterase viral delivery remains unknown. Here, telemetric recording of electrocardiograms from awake, unrestrained mice receiving a course of moderately large cocaine doses (30 mg/kg, twice daily for 3 weeks) revealed protection against a 2-fold prolongation of the QT interval conferred by pretreatment with cocaine hydrolase vector. By itself, this prophylactic treatment did not affect QT interval duration or cardiac structure, demonstrating that viral delivery of cocaine hydrolase has no intrinsic cardiac toxicity and, on the contrary, actively protects against cocaine-induced QT prolongation.

PubMedSearch : Murthy_2016_J.Pharmacol.Exp.Ther_356_720
PubMedID: 26669428

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Citations formats

Murthy V, Reyes S, Geng L, Gao Y, Brimijoin S (2016)
Cocaine Hydrolase Gene Transfer Demonstrates Cardiac Safety and Efficacy against Cocaine-Induced QT Prolongation in Mice
Journal of Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics 356 :720

Murthy V, Reyes S, Geng L, Gao Y, Brimijoin S (2016)
Journal of Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics 356 :720