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Vol. 30, Issue 6, 716-723, June 2002
Department of Pharmacology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor,
Michigan
Although there are several published demonstrations that exogenous
butyrylcholinesterase (EC 3.1.1.8) works to antagonize cocaine in vivo,
a systematic characterization of the enzyme-drug interaction is lacking
as is confirmation of the mechanism of effect. This has been addressed
using cocaine-induced locomotor activity in mice as a behavioral
endpoint. The enzyme was effective, but the enzyme dose-antagonist
effect relationship revealed an asymptotic partial maximum effect. This
effect was not due to dose-dependent enzyme pharmacokinetics or to a
stimulant effect of the cocaine metabolites but rather to partial
metabolism of cocaine. Since neither metabolite of cocaine inhibited
enzyme activity as potently as cocaine, partial metabolism is not
likely due to end-product inhibition. The enzyme reduced the maximum effect of cocaine on locomotor activity. The mechanistic data are
generally consistent: the enzyme was inactive against the nonester
dopamine/norepinephrine uptake inhibitor, nomifensine, and a
paraoxon-inactivated sample of enzyme was ineffective. However, the
enzyme was effective against bupropion, a nonester dopamine uptake inhibitor.
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