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Long-acting cocaine hydrolase for addiction therapy
Edited by Joanna S. Fowler, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY, and approved November 30, 2015 (received for review September 4, 2015)
This article has a Letter. Please see:
See related content:
- Benzoic acid formed from cocaine benzoyl ester- Mar 22, 2016

Significance
It is essential for a truly effective addiction medication to block the drug's physiological effects effectively without affecting normal functions of the brain and other critical organs such as the heart and while still preventing relapse during abstinence. Most popularly used pharmacological approaches to addiction treatment, including all currently available addiction therapies, either affect normal functions of brain receptors/transporters or are unable to prevent relapse. The long-acting enzyme approach may provide a novel, truly promising therapy capable of effectively blocking the physiological and toxic effects of cocaine without affecting normal functions of the brain and other critical organs and prevent relapse during abstinence. New insights obtained in this study also may be valuable in guiding development of other therapeutic proteins.
Abstract
Cocaine abuse is a world-wide public health and social problem without a US Food and Drug Administration-approved medication. An ideal anticocaine medication would accelerate cocaine metabolism, producing biologically inactive metabolites by administration of an efficient cocaine-specific exogenous enzyme. Our recent studies have led to the discovery of the desirable, highly efficient cocaine hydrolases (CocHs) that can efficiently detoxify and inactivate cocaine without affecting normal functions of the CNS. Preclinical and clinical data have demonstrated that these CocHs are safe for use in humans and are effective for accelerating cocaine metabolism. However, the actual therapeutic use of a CocH in cocaine addiction treatment is limited by its short biological half-life (e.g., 8 h or shorter in rats). Here we demonstrate a novel CocH form, a catalytic antibody analog, which is a fragment crystallizable (Fc)-fused CocH dimer (CocH-Fc) constructed by using CocH to replace the Fab region of human IgG1. The CocH-Fc not only has a high catalytic efficiency against cocaine but also, like an antibody, has a considerably longer biological half-life (e.g., ∼107 h in rats). A single dose of CocH-Fc was able to accelerate cocaine metabolism in rats even after 20 d and thus block cocaine-induced hyperactivity and toxicity for a long period. Given the general observation that the biological half-life of a protein drug is significantly longer in humans than in rodents, the CocH-Fc reported in this study could allow dosing once every 2–4 wk, or longer, for treatment of cocaine addiction in humans.
Footnotes
- ↵1To whom correspondence may be addressed. Email: zhan{at}uky.edu or fzhen2{at}email.uky.edu.
Author contributions: F.Z. and C.-G.Z. designed research; X.C., L.X., S.H., Z.J., and T.Z. performed research; X.C., T.Z., F.Z., and C.-G.Z. analyzed data; and X.C., F.Z., and C.-G.Z. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1517713113/-/DCSupplemental.












