Cocaine addiction remains a major public health problem in industrialized countries. However, up till now, efforts to find effective therapies for cocaine addiction have been unsuccessful. Recent studies of the dopamine transporter (DAT) have provided strong evidence of differential sites for dopamine translocation and cocaine binding. In view of this knowledge, the strategy of identifying pharmacological agents that block cocaine binding to the DAT but do not inhibit dopamine uptake as effectively as cocaine has emerged. We have proposed the hypothesisthat peptides, generated from the antigen-combining regions of anti-idiotypic (Ab2 beta) antibodies and selected for their ability to inhibit cocaine binding to the DAT without interfering with dopamine uptake, should function as therapeutic """"""""cocaine antagonists."""""""" In this project, we will pursue four specific aims: 1. Characterization of Fab fragments of selected Ab 2beta with respect to their binding affinity and specificity for the DAT 2. Generation of scFv by cloning and expression of the antigen-combining regions of the selected Ab 2beta 3. Investigation of the ability of these scFv to block cocaine binding to the DAT without interfering with dopamine uptake 4. Sequence data analysis
Ho, Mitchell; Segre, Mariangela (2003) Inhibition of cocaine binding to the human dopamine transporter by a single chain anti-idiotypic antibody: its cloning, expression, and functional properties. Biochim Biophys Acta 1638:257-66 |
Ho, M; Segre, M (2001) Cloning and sequence analysis of cDNAs encoding the heavy and light chain variable regions of an Ab2beta anti-idiotypic monoclonal antibody possessing an internal image of cocaine. Biochim Biophys Acta 1521:135-40 |