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Research ArticleArticle

Subunit Stabilization and Polyethylene Glycolation of Cocaine Esterase Improves In Vivo Residence Time

Diwahar Narasimhan, Gregory T. Collins, Mark R. Nance, Joseph Nichols, Elin Edwald, Jimmy Chan, Mei-Chuan Ko, James H. Woods, John J. G. Tesmer and Roger K. Sunahara
Molecular Pharmacology December 2011, 80 (6) 1056-1065; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/mol.111.074997
Diwahar Narasimhan
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Gregory T. Collins
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Mark R. Nance
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Joseph Nichols
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Elin Edwald
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Jimmy Chan
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Mei-Chuan Ko
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James H. Woods
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John J. G. Tesmer
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Roger K. Sunahara
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Abstract

No small-molecule therapeutic is available to treat cocaine addiction, but enzyme-based therapy to accelerate cocaine hydrolysis in serum has gained momentum. Bacterial cocaine esterase (CocE) is the fastest known native enzyme that hydrolyzes cocaine. However, its lability at 37°C has limited its therapeutic potential. Cross-linking subunits through disulfide bridging is commonly used to stabilize multimeric enzymes. Herein we use structural methods to guide the introduction of two cysteine residues within dimer interface of CocE to facilitate intermolecular disulfide bond formation. The disulfide-crosslinked enzyme displays improved thermostability, particularly when combined with previously described mutations that enhance stability (T172R-G173Q). The newly modified enzyme yielded an extremely stable form of CocE (CCRQ-CocE) that retained greater than 90% of its activity after 41 days at 37°C, representing an improvement of more than 4700-fold over the wild-type enzyme. CCRQ-CocE could also be modified by polyethylene glycol (PEG) polymers, which improved its in vivo residence time from 24 to 72 h, as measured by a cocaine lethality assay, by self-administration in rodents, and by measurement of inhibition of cocaine-induced cardiovascular effects in rhesus monkeys. PEG-CCRQ elicited negligible immune response in rodents. Subunit stabilization and PEGylation has thus produced a potential protein therapeutic with markedly higher stability both in vitro and in vivo.

Footnotes

  • ↵Embedded Image The online version of this article (available at http://molpharm.aspetjournals.org) contains supplemental material.

  • This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health National Institute on Drug Abuse [Grants DA021416, DA025100, DA023213]; and the National Institutes of Health National Institute of General Medical Sciences [Grant GM007767].

  • Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at http://molpharm.aspetjournals.org.

    doi:10.1124/mol.111.074997.

  • ABBREVIATIONS:

    BchE
    butyrylcholinesterase
    wt
    wild type
    CocE
    cocaine esterase
    PEG
    polyethylene glycol
    PAGE
    polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
    MALDI
    matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization
    CC
    G4C/S10C
    RMSD
    root-mean-squared deviation
    CCRQ
    G4C/S10C/T172R/G173Q
    Tm
    melting temperature
    TOF
    time of flight
    RQ
    T172R/G173Q
    KQ
    L169K-G173Q
    MAP
    mean arterial pressure
    HR
    heart rate.

  • Received July 25, 2011.
  • Accepted August 23, 2011.
  • Copyright © 2011 The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Molecular Pharmacology: 80 (6)
Molecular Pharmacology
Vol. 80, Issue 6
1 Dec 2011
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Research ArticleArticle

Subunit Stabilization and PEGylation of Cocaine Esterase

Diwahar Narasimhan, Gregory T. Collins, Mark R. Nance, Joseph Nichols, Elin Edwald, Jimmy Chan, Mei-Chuan Ko, James H. Woods, John J. G. Tesmer and Roger K. Sunahara
Molecular Pharmacology December 1, 2011, 80 (6) 1056-1065; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/mol.111.074997

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Research ArticleArticle

Subunit Stabilization and PEGylation of Cocaine Esterase

Diwahar Narasimhan, Gregory T. Collins, Mark R. Nance, Joseph Nichols, Elin Edwald, Jimmy Chan, Mei-Chuan Ko, James H. Woods, John J. G. Tesmer and Roger K. Sunahara
Molecular Pharmacology December 1, 2011, 80 (6) 1056-1065; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/mol.111.074997
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