Addiction Imaging Research Group, Vivian M. Rakoff PET Imaging Centre, Human Brain Laboratory, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5T 1R8.
J Neurosci. 2012 Jan 25;32(4):1353-9. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4371-11.2012.
Positron emission tomography (PET) findings suggesting lower D2-type dopamine receptors and dopamine concentration in brains of stimulant users have prompted speculation that increasing dopamine signaling might help in drug treatment. However, this strategy needs to consider the possibility, based on animal and postmortem human data, that dopaminergic activity at the related D3 receptor might, in contrast, be elevated and thereby contribute to drug-taking behavior. We tested the hypothesis that D3 receptor binding is above normal in methamphetamine (MA) polydrug users, using PET and the D3-preferring ligand [11C]-(+)-propyl-hexahydro-naphtho-oxazin ([11C]-(+)-PHNO). Sixteen control subjects and 16 polydrug users reporting MA as their primary drug of abuse underwent PET scanning after [11C]-(+)-PHNO. Compared with control subjects, drug users had higher [11C]-(+)-PHNO binding in the D3-rich midbrain substantia nigra (SN; +46%; p<0.02) and in the globus pallidus (+9%; p=0.06) and ventral pallidum (+11%; p=0.1), whereas binding was slightly lower in the D2-rich dorsal striatum (approximately -4%, NS; -12% in heavy users, p=0.01) and related to drug-use severity. The [11C]-(+)-PHNO binding ratio in D3-rich SN versus D2-rich dorsal striatum was 55% higher in MA users (p=0.004), with heavy but not moderate users having ratios significantly different from controls. [11C]-(+)-PHNO binding in SN was related to self-reported "drug wanting." We conclude that the dopamine D3 receptor, unlike the D2 receptor, might be upregulated in brains of MA polydrug users, although lower dopamine levels in MA users could have contributed to the finding. Pharmacological studies are needed to establish whether normalization of D3 receptor function could reduce vulnerability to relapse in stimulant abuse.
正电子发射断层扫描(PET)发现,兴奋剂使用者大脑中的 D2 型多巴胺受体和多巴胺浓度较低,这促使人们推测增加多巴胺信号可能有助于药物治疗。然而,根据动物和人体死后的数据,这种策略需要考虑到相关的 D3 受体的多巴胺活性可能相反会升高,从而导致药物滥用行为的可能性。我们使用 PET 和 D3 偏好配体 [11C]-(+)-丙基-六氢-萘并-恶嗪 ([11C]-(+)-PHNO),测试了 D3 受体结合在甲基苯丙胺(MA)多药使用者中高于正常水平的假设。16 名对照受试者和 16 名报告 MA 为主要滥用药物的多药使用者在 [11C]-(+)-PHNO 后接受 PET 扫描。与对照受试者相比,药物使用者的 D3 丰富的中脑黑质(SN;+46%;p<0.02)和苍白球(+9%;p=0.06)和腹侧苍白球(+11%;p=0.1)中的 [11C]-(+)-PHNO 结合更高,而 D2 丰富的背侧纹状体(约-4%,NS;重度使用者-12%,p=0.01)中的结合略低,且与药物使用严重程度相关。MA 使用者中 D3 丰富的 SN 与 D2 丰富的背侧纹状体的 [11C]-(+)-PHNO 结合比值高 55%(p=0.004),重度但非中度使用者的比值与对照组有显著差异。SN 中的 [11C]-(+)-PHNO 结合与自我报告的“药物渴望”有关。我们得出结论,与 D2 受体不同,多巴胺 D3 受体可能在 MA 多药使用者的大脑中上调,尽管 MA 使用者的多巴胺水平较低可能促成了这一发现。需要进行药理学研究以确定 D3 受体功能的正常化是否可以降低兴奋剂滥用的复发易感性。