Title: Cracking The Metabolism Cocaine
1Shannon Hoon
Chris Farley
River Phoenix
2What did they have in common?
- They were all cocaine addicts and they died of
cocaine overdose!
3COCAINE ESTERASE (cocE)The story of the dope
fiend Rhodococcus bacteria.
- By Gladys de Leon
- Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
- University of Guelph
4Overview
- general description of Cocaine
- Brain mechanism under influence of cocaine
- Effects and dependency
- CocE overview
- Structural and biochemical analysis of cocE
- Concluding remarks
5Structure of cocaine
6What is cocaine?
- C, coke, snow, nose, candy, crack
- powerful central nervous system (CNS) stimulant
- provides intense feelings of pleasure
- Derived from leaves of South American coca bush
(erythroxylon coca and erythroxylon
novogranatense) - Addictive and can cause death
7Erythroxylon coca
- cultivated in Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador
- grows to a height of up to eight feet
- rich in vitamins, protein, calcium, iron and
fibre - cocaine content of the leaves ranges from O.1 to
0.9
http//cocaine.org/cokleaf.html
8History of cocaine
- Used by man since 800 A.D.
- Cultivated by the Incan
- 1500s - Coca chewing of the South American
Indians - 1860s - Isolated from coca leaf by Albert Nieman
- 1880s - Sigmund Freuds Uber Coca
- 1886 - Coca Cola a non-alcoholic medicinal tonic
from Atlanta Georgia - 1890s Cocaine containing medicine
- 1922 Narcotic Drug Import and Export Act
restricted coca imports
9Word from our sponsors
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12 Coke in the 20th Century
131 Kg of Cocaine
14Tools of Trade
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16How does Cocaine affect the brain?
17The Dopamine Hypothesis
F. I. Carroll et al, Journal of Medical Chemistry
42, 2721-36 (1999)
18The brain
NA nucleus accumbens VT ventral tegmental FC
frontal cortex CB cerebeller PT putamen CN-
caudate nucleus
F. I. Carroll et al, Journal of Medical Chemistry
42, 2721-36 (1999)
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20What are the effects of cocaine on the mind?
- Thinking and feeling brain
- Racing thoughts
- Reward
- Felling of well being
21!! EUPHORIA !!
- Negative effects
- Increased heart rate
- Hyperthermia
- Dilated pupils
- Diaphoresis
- Irritability
- Decrease appetite
- Sleeplessness
- Depression
- Over dose respiratory arrest
- Myocardial infarction
- Arrhythmia
- Seizures
22Cocaine Dependency Three classical clinical
characteristics that define addiction
- Psychological dependence
- Tolerance
- Physical withdrawal
231. Psychological dependence
- Compulsive drug seeking behavior despite negative
consequences - Drug becomes the highest priority in the
individuals life
242. Tolerance
- As time goes on, more and more of the drug is
needed to produce the same high
253. Physical withdrawal
- Constellation signs and symptoms that occur
following cessation of drug use
26Emergency Situation
27So what is an ideal cocaine antidote in an
emergency setting?
- High catalytic proficiency
- Lack of observable product inhibition
- Ability to hydrolyze both cocaine and
cocaethylene
28Cocaine Esterase (cocE) is an attractive
candidate for rapid cocaine detoxification in an
emergency setting.
29Overview of cocE
- Identified in the bacteria Rhodococcus sp. Strain
MB1 (Rhodococcus thrives in the rhizosphere soil
of the cocaine-producing plant Erythroxylum coca) - Cocaine degrading enzyme
- First enzyme in the metabolic pathway leading to
cocaine catabolism - Inducible and specific for cocaine
30Hydrolysis of cocaine by cocE
D. W. Landry et al, Science, 259, 1899-1901
31Structural and Biochemical Characterization of
Cocaine Esterase (cocE)
32Structural Overview of cocE
- Belongs to the ?/? hydrolase superfamily
- 574 amino acids
- 65,000 Daltons
- 3 domains (DOM 1, DOM 2, DOM 3)
- 30 ?-sheet
- 23 ?-helix
33What is the structure of cocE?
N. A. Larsen et al., Nature Structural Biology
9, 17-21 (2002)
34Domain Structure and Association
35Domain 1 ?/? sandwich
- Residues 1-144 and residues 241-354
- Hydrolase fold (repeating ?-?- ? motifs)
- Central ?-sheet is predominantly parallel
- Contains the active site His-287
N. A. Larsen et al., Nature Structural Biology
9, 17-21 (2002)
36REVIEW
N. A. Larsen et al., Nature Structural Biology
9, 17-21 (2002)
37Domain 2 The ?-helical domain
- 95 amino acids
- Compose of 7 helices
- Inserted between ?6 and ?7 of Domain 1
- Five helix core helices H2-H6
N. A. Larsen et al., Nature Structural Biology
9, 17-21 (2002)
38REVIEW
N. A. Larsen et al., Nature Structural Biology
9, 17-21 (2002)
39Domain 3 jelly-roll ?-barrel
- 221 amino acids
- Overall fold has a jelly-roll-like topology (
i.e. Hgg-Haemagglutinin) - Mostly ?-structure
- ?-barrel-like core
- Strands connected by 6 cross over loops
- Important role in the overall tertiary structure
N. A. Larsen et al., Nature Structural Biology
9, 17-21 (2002)
40Active site of cocE
- Located in a cleft formed at the interface of the
three domains - Catalytic triad Ser 117, Asp 259 and His 287
- Oxyanion hole backbone amide of Y118 and Y44
N. A. Larsen et al., Nature Structural Biology
9, 17-21 (2002)
41Proposed Mechanism for acyl intermediate
hydrolysis
42Biochemical Characterization and Structural
Analysis of cocE
- cocE hydrolyzes cocaine faster than any other
reported cocaine esterase - Follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics with kcat 7.8
s-1 and Km 640 nm. - Similar rate for cocaethylene
- Validated the proposed mechanism
- Reveal contributions of active site towards
substrate recognition and catalysis
43J.M. Turner et al. Biochemistry, 41, 12297-12307
( 2002)
44In conclusion
- cocE enzyme itself has therapeutic potential
as an enzyme-based treatment for cocaine
overdose, furthermore, the crystal structure of
the bacterial cocaine esterase provides a basis
for further antibody engineering.
45http//cocaine.org/cokehell.html
46References
- W.F. Borson and T.D. Hurley, Nat Struct Biol. 9,
4-5 (2002). - N.A. Larsen et al., Nat Struct Biol. 9, 17-21
(2002). - J.M. Turner et al., Biochemistry, 41, 12297-12307
(2002). - Larsen, N. A., Zhou, B., Heine, A., Wirsching,
P., Janda, K. D., and Wilson, I. A. J. Mol. Biol.
311, 9-15 (2001) - F.I. Carroll, L.L. Howell, and M.J. Kuhar, J Med
Chem. 42, 2721-2736 (1999). - L.L. Howell and K.M. Wilcox, Perspectives in
Pharmacology, 298, 1- 6 (2000). - A. M. Washton and M.S. Gold. Cocaine A
clinicians handbook, The Guilford Press, New
York. 1987. Pp. 73-79. - D.W. Landry et al., Science, 259, 1899- 1901
(1993). - P.H. Earley. The Cocaine Recovery Book, Sage
Publications, London. 1991, pp.9-35. - L.M. Kamendulis et al., Jour. Phar. Exp. Ther.,
279, 713-717 (1996). - M.R. Brzezinski et al., Drug Metab Dispos., 9,
1089-1096 (1997). - C. E. Mattes et al., Addict Biol., 2, 171-188
(1998). - http//www.cocaine.org/cokeleaf.html
- http//www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hppb/alcohol-otherdrugs/pub
e/straight/stimulants.htm - http//www.a1b2c3.com/drugs/coc03.htm