Eldridge J C, Murphy L L, Landfield P W
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27103.
Steroids. 1991 May;56(5):226-31. doi: 10.1016/0039-128x(91)90038-w.
It has long been recognized that cannabinoids, including delta 9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the major psychoactive substance of marijuana, bear structural similarities to steroid hormones. The hippocampal region of the brain is particularly rich in glucocorticoid receptors (GCRs), and the region also displays dense autoradiographic binding by synthetic cannabinoids. The present report summarizes studies conducted on cannabinoid interaction with hippocampal GCRs, both in vivo and in vitro. Young rats treated for 8 months with THC displayed anatomic and cellular changes in the hippocampus similar to those seen in older, untreated rats, or in rats treated with high levels of glucocorticoids. Binding of [3H]dexamethasone in cytosol prepared from adrenalectomized rat hippocampus was reduced in the presence of 100-fold molar excess of unlabeled THC. However, further increases of THC concentration, to 20,000-fold excess, could displace no more than 50% of radiolabeled dexamethasone. Scatchard analysis of the binding produced a parallel competition plot for THC, versus the plot for dexamethasone, which may reflect a noncompetitive or allosteric interaction with hippocampal GCR. Cannabidiol, a nonpsychoactive cannabinoid, displayed less competition than THC in all parameters. Treatment of adrenalectomized rats for 14 days with 10 mg/kg THC produced down-regulation of hippocampal GCR binding in a manner also reported following high glucocorticoid administration. Although an initial oral administration of THC to intact rats stimulated release of plasma corticosterone, daily repetition of treatment for 7 and 14 days failed to elicit further corticosterone secretion. Taken together, the results indicate that THC may possess some agonist-like properties of glucocorticoids at the hippocampal GCR site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
长期以来,人们一直认识到,大麻素,包括δ9 - 四氢大麻酚(THC),大麻的主要精神活性物质,与类固醇激素在结构上有相似之处。大脑的海马区尤其富含糖皮质激素受体(GCRs),并且该区域也显示出合成大麻素的密集放射自显影结合。本报告总结了在体内和体外进行的关于大麻素与海马GCRs相互作用的研究。用THC处理8个月的幼鼠在海马中表现出解剖学和细胞变化,类似于未处理的老年大鼠或用高剂量糖皮质激素处理的大鼠。在存在100倍摩尔过量的未标记THC的情况下,从肾上腺切除大鼠海马制备的细胞溶质中[3H]地塞米松的结合减少。然而,将THC浓度进一步增加到20000倍过量,也只能取代不超过50%的放射性标记地塞米松。对结合的Scatchard分析产生了THC的平行竞争图,与地塞米松的图相比,这可能反映了与海马GCR的非竞争性或变构相互作用。大麻二酚,一种无精神活性的大麻素,在所有参数中显示出比THC更少的竞争。用10mg/kg THC对肾上腺切除大鼠进行14天的治疗导致海马GCR结合下调,这种方式在高糖皮质激素给药后也有报道。虽然对完整大鼠最初口服THC会刺激血浆皮质酮的释放,但每天重复治疗7天和14天未能引发进一步的皮质酮分泌。综上所述,结果表明THC在海马GCR位点可能具有一些糖皮质激素样的激动剂特性。(摘要截短至250字)