Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA.
Neuropsychopharmacology. 2011 Mar;36(4):871-8. doi: 10.1038/npp.2010.226. Epub 2010 Dec 15.
Addiction is a chronic relapsing disorder hypothesized to be produced by drug-induced plasticity that renders individuals vulnerable to craving-inducing stimuli such as re-exposure to the drug of abuse. Drug-induced plasticity that may result in the addiction phenotype includes increased excitatory signaling within corticostriatal pathways that correlates with craving in humans and is necessary for reinstatement in rodents. Reduced cystine-glutamate exchange by system x(c)- appears to contribute to heightened excitatory signaling within the striatum, thereby posing this as a novel target in the treatment of addiction. In the present report, we examined the impact of repeated N-acetyl cysteine, which is commonly used to activate cystine-glutamate exchange, on reinstatement in rodents in a preclinical study and on craving in cocaine-dependent humans in a preliminary, proof-of-concept clinical experiment. Interestingly, repeated administration (7 days) of N-acetyl cysteine (60 mg/kg, IP) produced a significant reduction in cocaine (10 mg/kg, IP)-induced reinstatement, even though rats (N=10-12/group) were tested 24 h after the last administration of N-acetyl cysteine. The reduction in behavior despite the absence of the N-acetyl cysteine indicates that repeated N-acetyl cysteine may have altered drug-induced plasticity that underlies drug-seeking behavior. In parallel, our preliminary clinical data indicate that repeated administration (4 days) of N-acetyl cysteine (1200-2400 mg/day) to cocaine-dependent human subjects (N=4 per group) produced a significant reduction in craving following an experimenter-delivered IV injection of cocaine (20 mg/70 kg/60 s). Collectively, these data demonstrate that N-acetyl cysteine diminishes the motivational qualities of a cocaine challenge injection possibly by altering pathogenic drug-induced plasticity.
成瘾是一种慢性复发性疾病,据推测是由药物引起的可塑性引起的,使个体易受引起渴望的刺激(如重新接触滥用药物)的影响。可能导致成瘾表型的药物诱导可塑性包括皮质纹状体途径中兴奋性信号的增加,这与人类的渴望相关,并且是重新进入啮齿动物的必要条件。系统 x(c)-中的半胱氨酸-谷氨酸交换减少似乎导致纹状体中的兴奋性信号增强,从而使该信号成为治疗成瘾的新靶点。在本报告中,我们研究了重复使用 N-乙酰半胱氨酸(通常用于激活半胱氨酸-谷氨酸交换)对啮齿动物重新进入的影响,以及在可卡因依赖人类的初步概念验证临床实验中对渴望的影响。有趣的是,重复给予 N-乙酰半胱氨酸(60mg/kg,IP)(7 天)可显著减少可卡因(10mg/kg,IP)诱导的重新进入,尽管大鼠(每组 10-12 只)在最后一次 N-乙酰半胱氨酸给药后 24 小时进行了测试。尽管没有 N-乙酰半胱氨酸,但行为的减少表明重复的 N-乙酰半胱氨酸可能改变了药物诱导的可塑性,这是药物寻求行为的基础。平行地,我们的初步临床数据表明,重复给予 N-乙酰半胱氨酸(1200-2400mg/天)(4 天)至可卡因依赖的人类受试者(每组 4 名)在实验者给予 IV 注射可卡因(20mg/70kg/60s)后可显著减少渴望。总的来说,这些数据表明 N-乙酰半胱氨酸可能通过改变致病性药物诱导的可塑性来减弱可卡因挑战注射的动机质量。