VICE VACCINES
Scientists give a shot in the arm to the fight against smoking,
drug abuse, and obesity
BY CHRISTEN BROWNLEE
When Rachel Harrison was 16 years old, she
took a drag from her first cigarette. She
remembers loving it right away—the taste,
the warmth, and especially the lightheaded
rush that smoking gave her. Like a bad char-
acter in an after-school special, she chain-smoked an
entire pack that first time while hanging out with other
smokers from the popular crowd.
“I know it sounds cliché, but I started smoking because all the
cool kids were doing it,” says Harrison, now 32.
From high school through college, and now in her job as a public relations professional in New York, Harrison has kept up the
habit. Nowadays, she paces her smoking to three or four cigarettes
each workday. The weekends are a “free-for-all,” she says, when she
goes through often more than a pack a day.
But even though some part of her still loves each smoke as
much as her first one, Harrison says, she longs to escape cigarettes’ fiery grip. In her quest to avoid the bad breath, wrinkles,
and cancer that smoking can bring, she guesses that she’s tried to
quit about 30 times in the past 15 years. But no matter which
method she’s used—nicotine gum, the patch, or just quitting cold
turkey—she’s never succeeded.
“I come back to it usually because a friend will be smoking and
I’ll ask for a drag,” Harrison says. “That first drag will taste so disgusting, but for some reason, literally an hour later I’m asking for
a full cigarette, then buying a new pack.”
Soon, Harrison and other people plagued by some of Western
societies’ hardest-to-kick habits may literally get a shot in the arm:
vaccines to help them quit. Vaccinations have long had a starring
role in preventing a variety of diseases. But now, researchers are
aiming the needle at a new set of targets—smoking, obesity, and
illicit drugs. These vaccines, currently in development, could give
people a novel way to boost their health and vanquish their vices.
SMOKE OUT Vaccines have been doing their part to eradicate
disease since the 18th century, typically by jump-starting the
immune system to fight infectious bacteria and viruses such as
those that cause the flu, cholera, or tetanus. But in 1974, narcotics
researcher C. Robert Schuster, then at the University of Chicago,
and his colleagues published the first evidence that vaccines could
rev up the immune system against a different type of target—
heroin. In a twist on their typical preventive role, these vaccines
stop substances from satisfying an already-addicted user’s cravings.
Normally, the immune system doesn’t recognize heroin and
other drugs as foes worthy of attack. That’s because drug molecules
are significantly smaller than the foreign proteins on bacteria and
viruses that trigger the body to defend itself, says immunologist
Michael Owens of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
in Little Rock.
“In general, the cutoff in size for the immune system to recognize something as foreign will be about 10,000 daltons in weight.
Most drugs of abuse are less than 500 [daltons],” he says. One
dalton is about the weight of a single hydrogen atom.
“People can still
smoke, but they
don’t get the
rush, they don’t
feel good, and
they don’t keep
the addiction.
You take away
the reason they
smoke.”
— HENRIK RASMUSSEN,
NABI BIOPHARMACEUTICALS
To get the immune system fired
up to fight heroin, Schuster and
his team decided to make a vaccine by attaching heroin molecules
to something that reliably triggers
a response in healthy people and
other animals. They used a protein from cows’ blood. When the
immune system senses the large,
foreign protein with drug molecules piggybacked onto them, it
pumps out a variety of antibodies,
explains Owen. Some antibodies
recognize pieces of the protein, but
others home in on the drug.
“The small drug molecules are
just along for the ride,” adds vaccine researcher Kim Janda of the
Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Calif., but the immune system generates antibodies against them nonetheless.
After Schuster’s team gave the vaccine to heroin-addicted rhesus monkeys that could self-administer the drug by pushing a
lever, the animals did so significantly less often than they had
previously. The researchers hypothesized that the vaccine somehow prevented the monkeys from getting high, taking away their
incentive to keep using the drug.
However, notes Owens, the idea of vaccinating against illegal
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