Principal Investigator:
Ronald G Crystal, Professor and Chair of Genetic Medicine
Background & Unmet Need
- Current strategies to help smokers quit include counseling and medication therapies
- However, due to the strong addictive qualities of nicotine, smokers have a relapse rate of 70% to 80% within 6 months
- One therapeutic approach is to develop an anti-nicotine vaccine, in which nicotine is administered to induce antibodies which can later sequester nicotine
- Because nicotine is a small molecule not seen by the immune system, nicotine (or a nicotine analog) must be coupled to a larger molecule to induce an anti-nicotine immune response
- Clinical trials of anti-nicotine vaccines show varied immune responses among participants, and only a small percentage successfully quit smoking
- Unmet Need: A nicotine vaccine which effectively induces immune response and aids in smoking cessation
Technology Overview
- The Technology: A conjugate of an isolated adenovirus hexon protein coupled to nicotine or a nicotine analog as a smoking cessation strategy
- The Discovery: Coupling the highly immunogenic adenovirus (Ad) hexon protein to the nicotine hapten AM1 increases the immunogenicity of a nicotine vaccine
- PoC Data: Mice vaccinated with the conjugate, HexonAM1, generated high titers of anti-nicotine antibodies
- When the mice were challenged with nicotine, IgG-bound serum nicotine increased 5.2-fold compared to naïve control mice and nicotine levels in the brain were reduced by 53%
- The HexonAM1 vaccinated mice also showed significant alleviation of nicotine-suppressed locomotor behavior
Technology Applications
- Anti-nicotine vaccine for the treatment and prevention of nicotine addiction
- Anti-nicotine vaccine for comorbid indications, including Critical Limb Ischemia or Buerger’s Disease
Technology Advantages
- Demonstrated high titers of anti-nicotine antibodies that effectively suppressed the effects of nicotine
- Provides a new platform for vaccines against small molecules
Publications
Resources
Intellectual Property
Patents
- US Patent 10,004,811: "Development of a highly efficient second generation nicotine-conjugate vaccine to treat nicotine addiction" (Issued Jun 26, 2018)
Cornell Reference
- 5891
Contact Information
For additional information please contact
Brian Kelly
Director, Business Development and Licensing
Phone: (646) 962-7041
Email: bjk44@cornell.edu