| 11 Mai 2013
New Anti-Cocaine Vaccine Research Shows Drug Can't Reach the Brain, Human Clinical Trials on the Horizon
 "The  vaccine eats up the cocaine in the blood like a little Pac-man before  it can reach the brain," says the study's lead investigator, Dr. Ronald  G. Crystal, chairman of the Department of Genetic Medicine at Weill  Cornell Medical College.
 "We  believe this strategy is a win-win for those individuals, among the  estimated 1.4 million cocaine users in the United States, who are  committed to breaking their addiction to the drug," he says. "Even if a  person who receives the anti-cocaine vaccine falls off the wagon,  cocaine will have no effect."
 Cocaine,  a tiny molecule drug, works to produce feelings of pleasure because it  blocks the recycling of dopamine -- the so-called "pleasure"  neurotransmitter -- in two areas of the brain, the putamen in the  forebrain and the caudate nucleus in the brain's center. When dopamine  accumulates at the nerve endings, "you get this massive flooding of  dopamine and that is the feel good part of the cocaine high," says Dr.  Crystal.
 The  novel vaccine Dr. Crystal and his colleagues developed combines bits of  the common cold virus with a particle that mimics the structure of  cocaine. When the vaccine is injected into an animal, its body "sees"  the cold virus and mounts an immune response against both the virus and  the cocaine impersonator that is hooked to it. "The immune system learns  to see cocaine as an intruder," says Dr. Crystal. "Once immune cells  are educated to regard cocaine as the enemy, it produces antibodies,  from that moment on, against cocaine the moment the drug enters the  body."
 In  their first study in animals, the researchers injected billions of  their viral concoction into laboratory mice, and found a strong immune  response was generated against the vaccine. Also, when the scientists  extracted the antibodies produced by the mice and put them in test  tubes, it gobbled up cocaine. They also saw that mice that received both  the vaccine and cocaine were much less hyperactive than untreated mice  given cocaine. 
 Booster Shots to Dampen the Cocaine High
 They  developed a tool to measure how much cocaine attached to the dopamine  transporter, which picks up dopamine in the synapse between neurons and  brings it out to be recycled. If cocaine is in the brain, it binds on to  the transporter, effectively blocking the transporter from ferrying  dopamine out of the synapse, keeping the neurotransmitter active to  produce a drug high. 
 In  the study, the researchers attached a short-lived isotope tracer to the  dopamine transporter. The activity of the tracer could be seen using  positron emission tomography (PET). The tool measured how much of the  tracer attached to the dopamine receptor in the presence or absence of  cocaine. 
 Previous  research had shown in humans that at least 47 percent of the dopamine  transporter had to be occupied by cocaine in order to produce a drug  high. The researchers found, in vaccinated primates, that cocaine  occupancy of the dopamine receptor was reduced to levels of less than 20  percent.
 When  the vaccine is studied in humans, the non-toxic dopamine transporter  tracer can be used to help study its effectiveness as well, he adds. 
 "An  anti-cocaine vaccination will require booster shots in humans, but we  don't know yet how often these booster shots will be needed," says Dr.  Crystal. "I believe that for those people who desperately want to break  their addiction, a series of vaccinations will help."
 Co-authors  of the study include Dr. Anat Maoz, Dr. Martin J. Hicks, Dr. Shankar  Vallabhajosula, Michael Synan, Dr. Paresh J. Kothari, Dr. Jonathan P.  Dyke, Dr. Douglas J. Ballon, Dr. Stephen M. Kaminsky, Dr. Bishnu P. De  and Dr. Jonathan B. Rosenberg from Weill Cornell Medical College; Dr.  Diana Martinez from Columbia University; and Dr. George F. Koob and Dr.  Kim D. Janda from The Scripps Research Institute. 
 The study was funded by grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). 
 The  Cornell Center for Technology Enterprise and Commercialization, on  behalf of Cornell University, has filed a patent application based on  the research described in this press release.  Dr. Crystal is named as a  co-inventor on the patent application. 
 Dr.  Vallabhajosula has consultation agreements with two  radio-pharmaceutical companies. All other authors declare no conflicts  of interest.
 Weill Cornell Medical College 









