Fishberg Department of Neuroscience, Friedman Brain Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, One Gustave L. Levy Place, Box 1065, New York, NY 10029, USA.
Neuropharmacology. 2014 Jan;76 Pt B(0 0):259-68. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2013.04.004. Epub 2013 Apr 30.
Drug addiction involves potentially life-long behavioral abnormalities that are caused in vulnerable individuals by repeated exposure to a drug of abuse. The persistence of these behavioral changes suggests that long-lasting changes in gene expression, within particular regions of the brain, may contribute importantly to the addiction phenotype. Work over the past decade has demonstrated a crucial role for epigenetic mechanisms in driving lasting changes in gene expression in diverse tissues, including brain. This has prompted recent research aimed at characterizing the influence of epigenetic regulatory events in mediating the lasting effects of drugs of abuse on the brain in animal models of drug addiction. This review provides a progress report of this still early work in the field. As will be seen, there is robust evidence that repeated exposure to drugs of abuse induces changes within the brain's reward regions in three major modes of epigenetic regulation-histone modifications such as acetylation and methylation, DNA methylation, and non-coding RNAs. In several instances, it has been possible to demonstrate directly the contribution of such epigenetic changes to addiction-related behavioral abnormalities. Studies of epigenetic mechanisms of addiction are also providing an unprecedented view of the range of genes and non-genic regions that are affected by repeated drug exposure and the precise molecular basis of that regulation. Work is now needed to validate key aspects of this work in human addiction and evaluate the possibility of mining this information to develop new diagnostic tests and more effective treatments for addiction syndromes. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled 'NIDA 40th Anniversary Issue'.
药物成瘾涉及潜在的终身行为异常,这些异常是由滥用药物的个体反复暴露引起的。这些行为变化的持续存在表明,大脑特定区域的基因表达的持久变化可能对成瘾表型有重要贡献。过去十年的工作表明,表观遗传机制在驱动包括大脑在内的各种组织中基因表达的持久变化方面发挥着关键作用。这促使最近的研究旨在描述表观遗传调控事件在介导滥用药物对动物成瘾模型中大脑的持久影响方面的作用。这篇综述提供了该领域这一仍处于早期阶段的工作的进展报告。正如将看到的,有强有力的证据表明,滥用药物的反复暴露会导致大脑奖励区域内的三种主要表观遗传调控模式发生变化——组蛋白修饰(如乙酰化和甲基化)、DNA 甲基化和非编码 RNA。在某些情况下,已经有可能直接证明这种表观遗传变化对与成瘾相关的行为异常的贡献。成瘾的表观遗传机制研究还提供了一个前所未有的视角,了解受反复药物暴露影响的基因和非基因区域的范围,以及这种调控的精确分子基础。现在需要在人类成瘾中验证这项工作的关键方面,并评估挖掘这些信息以开发新的诊断测试和更有效的成瘾综合征治疗方法的可能性。本文是题为“NIDA 40 周年特刊”的特刊的一部分。