Vectorized Anti-Nicotine Antibody for Smoking Cessation

Principal Investigator: 

Ronald G. Crystal, Professor and Chair of Genetic Medicine

Background & Unmet Need

  • Cigarette smoking accounts for one of every five deaths in the US
  • While counseling and medication therapies can be effective, only 7.5% of smokers successfully quit each year due to the highly addictive nature of nicotine
  • One therapeutic approach is to develop an anti-nicotine vaccine, in which nicotine is administered to induce antibodies which can later sequester nicotine
  • Clinical trials of anti-nicotine vaccines show varied immune responses among participants, and only a small percentage successfully quit smoking
  • Anti-Nicotine mAbs have shown efficacy in sequestering nicotine in animal models, but repeated antibody administration may lower adherence
  • Unmet Need: An effective strategy to induce a persistent immune response to nicotine and aid in smoking cessation

Technology Overview

  • The Technology: An adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector encoding an anti-nicotine antibody to induce immune response against nicotine
  • PoC Data: Mice injected with this vector produced high concentrations of antibodies with high specificity and affinity for nicotine
  • The antibodies effectively sequestered serum nicotine with systemic administration in mice, reducing brain nicotine concentrations to only 15% of those in untreated mice
  • Nicotine-induced suppression of the cardiovascular and locomotive activity were abolished or greatly reduced in mice that expressed the antibodies

Technology Applications

  • Gene therapy for smoking cessation
  • Gene therapy for clinical indications associated with smoking, such as Critical Limb Ischemia or Buerger’s Disease

Technology Advantages

  • Produces high-titer, high-affinity and specific antibodies against nicotine
  • Induces persistent expression of anti-nicotine antibodies
  • Less demanding treatment regimen than repeated administration of monoclonal antibodies

Figure: Design of AAV vector encoding anti-nicotine antibody (AAVrh.10antiNic.Mab)

Intellectual Property

Patents

  • US Patent 10,093,947: "AAV-directed persistent expression of an anti-nicotine antibody gene for smoking cessation." (Issued Oct 9, 2018)

Cornell Reference

  • 5835

Contact Information

Brian Kelly, Ph.D.

For additional information please contact

Brian Kelly
Director, Business Development and Licensing
Phone: (646) 962-7041
Email: bjk44@cornell.edu