Verrico Christopher D, Lynch Laurie, Fahey Michele A, Fryer Ashley-Kay, Miller Gregory M, Madras Bertha K
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School and Division of Neurochemistry, New England Primate Research Center, Southborough, MA 01772-9102, USA.
J Psychopharmacol. 2008 Mar;22(2):187-202. doi: 10.1177/0269881107083639. Epub 2008 Feb 28.
Human MDMA (R,S-3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) users display selective cognitive deficits after acute MDMA exposure, frequently attributed to serotonin deficits. We postulated that MDMA will compromise executive function in primates and that an inhibitor of the serotonin transporter (SERT) and the norepinephrine transporter (NET) but not the dopamine (DAT) transporter, will prevent impairment. The potencies of DAT/NET, NET and SERT inhibitors to block transport of [(3)H]MDMA and [(3)H]monoamines were compared in vitro. Subsequently, cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fasicularis) were trained to stable performance in a reversal learning task. Effects of once-weekly oral or i.m. dose of MDMA (1.5 mg/kg, n = 4) on performance were monitored, alone or after pretreatment with inhibitors of the SERT, DAT or NET (prior to i.m. MDMA). 1) Drug potencies for blocking [(3)H]MDMA or [(3)H]monoamine transport were not consistent; 2) Oral MDMA increased error rates in a cognitive task for up to three days following exposure, whereas intramuscular MDMA prevented subjects from performing the cognitive task on the day of administration, but not on subsequent days; 3) The SERT inhibitor citalopram and the NET inhibitor desipramine, but not the DAT/NET inhibitor methylphenidate, reversed the effects of MDMA on task performance and mandibular movements induced by i.m. MDMA and 4) MDMA altered sleep latency. Oral MDMA impairs executive function in monkeys for several days, a finding of potential relevance to MDMA consumption by humans. Reversal of impaired executive function by a NET inhibitor implicates the NET and norepinephrine in MDMA-induced cognitive impairment and may be relevant to therapeutic strategies.
人类摇头丸(R,S - 3,4 - 亚甲基二氧甲基苯丙胺)使用者在急性接触摇头丸后会出现选择性认知缺陷,这通常归因于血清素缺乏。我们推测摇头丸会损害灵长类动物的执行功能,并且血清素转运体(SERT)和去甲肾上腺素转运体(NET)而非多巴胺(DAT)转运体的抑制剂将预防这种损害。在体外比较了DAT/NET、NET和SERT抑制剂阻断[(3)H]摇头丸和[(3)H]单胺转运的效力。随后,对食蟹猴(食蟹猕猴)进行训练,使其在反转学习任务中表现稳定。监测每周一次口服或肌肉注射剂量的摇头丸(1.5毫克/千克,n = 4)对其表现的影响,单独使用或在使用SERT、DAT或NET抑制剂预处理后(在肌肉注射摇头丸之前)使用。1)阻断[(3)H]摇头丸或[(3)H]单胺转运的药物效力不一致;2)口服摇头丸后,在接触后的长达三天内会增加认知任务中的错误率,而肌肉注射摇头丸会使受试者在给药当天无法完成认知任务,但在随后几天则不会;3)SERT抑制剂西酞普兰和NET抑制剂地昔帕明,但不是DAT/NET抑制剂哌甲酯,可逆转摇头丸对肌肉注射摇头丸诱导的任务表现和下颌运动的影响;4)摇头丸改变了睡眠潜伏期。口服摇头丸会在数天内损害猴子的执行功能,这一发现可能与人类使用摇头丸有关。NET抑制剂对受损执行功能的逆转表明NET和去甲肾上腺素与摇头丸诱导的认知损害有关,可能与治疗策略相关。