Shippenberg T S, Zapata A, Chefer V I
Integrative Neuroscience Section, NIH/NIDA Intramural Research Program, 333 Cassell Drive, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA.
Pharmacol Ther. 2007 Nov;116(2):306-21. doi: 10.1016/j.pharmthera.2007.06.011. Epub 2007 Jul 24.
Drug addiction is a chronic relapsing disease in which drug administration becomes the primary stimulus that drives behavior regardless of the adverse consequence that may ensue. As drug use becomes more compulsive, motivation for natural rewards that normally drive behavior decreases. The discontinuation of drug use is associated with somatic signs of withdrawal, dysphoria, anxiety, and anhedonia. These consequences of drug use are thought to contribute to the maintenance of drug use and to the reinstatement of compulsive drug use that occurs during the early phase of abstinence. Even, however, after prolonged periods of abstinence, 80-90% of human addicts relapse to addiction, suggesting that repeated drug use produces enduring changes in brain circuits that subserve incentive motivation and stimulus-response (habit) learning. A major goal of addiction research is the identification of the neural mechanisms by which drugs of abuse produce these effects. This article will review data showing that the dynorphin/kappa-opioid receptor (KOPr) system serves an essential function in opposing alterations in behavior and brain neurochemistry that occur as a consequence of repeated drug use and that aberrant activity of this system may not only contribute to the dysregulation of behavior that characterizes addiction but to individual differences in vulnerability to the pharmacological actions of cocaine and alcohol. We will provide evidence that the repeated administration of cocaine and alcohol up-regulates the dynorphin/KOPr system and that pharmacological treatments that target this system may prove effective in the treatment of drug addiction.
药物成瘾是一种慢性复发性疾病,在这种疾病中,药物施用成为驱动行为的主要刺激因素,而不顾及可能随之而来的不良后果。随着药物使用变得更具强迫性,通常驱动行为的自然奖赏的动机就会降低。停止使用药物与戒断的躯体症状、烦躁不安、焦虑和快感缺失有关。药物使用的这些后果被认为有助于维持药物使用以及恢复在禁欲早期出现的强迫性药物使用。然而,即使在长时间禁欲之后,80% - 90%的人类成瘾者会复吸成瘾,这表明反复使用药物会在大脑回路中产生持久变化,这些回路负责动机激励和刺激 - 反应(习惯)学习。成瘾研究的一个主要目标是确定滥用药物产生这些影响的神经机制。本文将综述数据,这些数据表明强啡肽/κ - 阿片受体(KOPr)系统在对抗因反复使用药物而出现的行为和大脑神经化学变化方面发挥着重要作用,并且该系统的异常活动不仅可能导致成瘾所特有的行为失调,还可能导致个体对可卡因和酒精药理作用的易感性差异。我们将提供证据表明,反复施用可卡因和酒精会上调强啡肽/KOPr系统,并且针对该系统的药物治疗可能被证明对药物成瘾的治疗有效。