Le Foll Bernard, Collo Ginetta, Rabiner Eugenii A, Boileau Isabelle, Merlo Pich Emilio, Sokoloff Pierre
Translational Addiction Research Laboratory, Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, ON, Canada; Alcohol Research and Treatment Clinic, Addiction Medicine Services, Ambulatory Care and Structured Treatments, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, ON, Canada; Department of Family and Community Medicine, Pharmacology and Toxicology, Psychiatry, Institute of Medical Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Division of Pharmacology, Department of Molecular and Translational Medicine, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy.
Prog Brain Res. 2014;211:255-75. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-444-63425-2.00011-8.
The dopamine D3 receptor is located in the limbic area and apparently mediates selective effects on motivation to take drugs and drug-seeking behaviors, so that there has been considerable interest on the possible use of D3 receptor ligands to treat drug addiction. However, only recently selective tools allowing studying this receptor have been developed. This chapter presents an overview of findings that were presented at a symposium on the conference Dopamine 2013 in Sardinia in May 2013. Novel neurobiological findings indicate that drugs of abuse can lead to significant structural plasticity in rodent brain and that this is dependent on the availability of functional dopamine D3 autoreceptor, whose activation increased phosphorylation in the ERK pathway and in the Akt/mTORC1 pathway indicating the parallel engagement of a series of intracellular signaling pathways all involved in cell growth and survival. Preclinical findings using animal models of drug-seeking behaviors confirm that D3 antagonists have a promising profile to treat drug addiction across drugs of abuse type. Imaging the D3 is now feasible in human subjects. Notably, the development of (+)-4-propyl-9-hydroxynaphthoxazine ligand used in positron emission tomography (PET) studies in humans allows to measure D3 and D2 receptors based on the area of the brain under study. This PET ligand has been used to confirm up-regulation of D3 sites in psychostimulant users and to reveal that tobacco smoking produces elevation of dopamine at the level of D3 sites. There are now novel antagonists being developed, but also old drugs such as buspirone, that are available to test the D3 hypothesis in humans. The first results of clinical investigations are now being provided. Overall, those recent findings support further exploration of D3 ligands to treat drug addiction.
多巴胺D3受体位于边缘系统区域,显然介导对吸毒动机和觅药行为的选择性作用,因此人们对使用D3受体配体治疗药物成瘾的可能性产生了浓厚兴趣。然而,直到最近才开发出能够研究该受体的选择性工具。本章概述了在2013年5月于撒丁岛举行的多巴胺2013会议的一次研讨会上所展示的研究结果。新的神经生物学研究结果表明,滥用药物可导致啮齿动物大脑出现显著的结构可塑性,且这取决于功能性多巴胺D3自身受体的可用性,其激活会增加ERK通路以及Akt/mTORC1通路中的磷酸化,这表明一系列均参与细胞生长和存活的细胞内信号通路同时被激活。使用觅药行为动物模型的临床前研究结果证实,D3拮抗剂在治疗各类滥用药物所致的药物成瘾方面具有良好前景。如今在人类受试者中对D3进行成像已切实可行。值得注意的是,用于人类正电子发射断层扫描(PET)研究的(+)-4-丙基-9-羟基萘恶嗪配体的开发,使得能够根据所研究大脑区域来测量D3和D2受体。这种PET配体已被用于证实精神兴奋剂使用者中D3位点的上调,并揭示吸烟会使D3位点水平的多巴胺升高。目前正在开发新型拮抗剂,同时也有诸如丁螺环酮等旧药可用于在人体中检验D3假说。现在已提供了临床研究的首批结果。总体而言,这些最新研究结果支持进一步探索D3配体用于治疗药物成瘾。