Abulseoud Osama A, Zuccoli Maria Laura, Zhang Lifeng, Barnes Allan, Huestis Marilyn A, Lin Da-Ting
Chemistry and Drug Metabolism Section, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Chemistry and Drug Metabolism Section, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, MD, USA; Department of Internal Medicine, Pharmacology and Toxicology Unit, University of Genoa, Italy.
Eur Neuropsychopharmacol. 2017 Jul;27(7):679-690. doi: 10.1016/j.euroneuro.2017.03.006. Epub 2017 Apr 26.
Recent reports of ammonia released during cannabis smoking raise concerns about putative neurotoxic effects. Cannabis (54mg) was administered in a double-blind, placebo-controlled design to healthy cannabis users (n=15) either orally, or through smoking (6.9%THC cigarette) or inhalation of vaporized cannabis (Volcano®). Serial assay of plasma ammonia concentrations at 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 15, 30, and 90min from onset of cannabis administration showed significant time (P=0.016), and treatment (P=0.0004) effects with robust differences between placebo and edible at 30 (P=0.002), and 90min (P=0.007) and between placebo and vaporized (P=0.02) and smoking routes (P=0.01) at 90min. Furthermore, plasma ammonia positively correlated with blood THC concentrations (P=0.03). To test the hypothesis that this delayed increase in plasma ammonia originates from the brain we administered THC (3 and 10mg/kg) to mice and measured plasma, liver, and brain ammonia concentrations at 1, 3, 5 and 30min post-injection. Administration of THC to mice did not cause significant change in plasma ammonia concentrations within the first 5min, but significantly reduced striatal glutamine-synthetase (GS) activity (P=0.046) and increased striatal ammonia concentration (P=0.016). Furthermore, plasma THC correlated positively with striatal ammonia concentration (P<0.001) and negatively with striatal GS activity (P=0.030). At 30min, we found marked increase in striatal ammonia (P<0.0001) associated with significant increase in plasma ammonia (P=0.042) concentration. In conclusion, the results of these studies demonstrate that cannabis intake caused time and route-dependent increases in plasma ammonia concentrations in human cannabis users and reduced brain GS activity and increased brain and plasma ammonia concentrations in mice.
近期有关大麻吸食过程中释放氨的报道引发了对潜在神经毒性作用的担忧。采用双盲、安慰剂对照设计,对15名健康大麻使用者给予大麻(54毫克),给药方式分别为口服、吸食(含6.9%四氢大麻酚的香烟)或吸入汽化大麻(Volcano®)。从开始给予大麻起,在0、2、4、6、8、10、15、30和90分钟时对血浆氨浓度进行系列测定,结果显示存在显著的时间效应(P = 0.016)和治疗效应(P = 0.0004),安慰剂与 edibles 在30分钟(P = 0.002)和90分钟(P = 0.007)时以及安慰剂与汽化大麻在90分钟时(P = 0.02)和吸食途径在90分钟时(P = 0.01)存在明显差异。此外,血浆氨与血液中四氢大麻酚浓度呈正相关(P = 0.03)。为检验血浆氨这种延迟升高源自大脑的假说,我们给小鼠注射四氢大麻酚(3和10毫克/千克),并在注射后1、3、5和30分钟测量血浆、肝脏和大脑中的氨浓度。给小鼠注射四氢大麻酚在最初5分钟内未引起血浆氨浓度显著变化,但显著降低了纹状体谷氨酰胺合成酶(GS)活性(P = 0.046)并升高了纹状体氨浓度(P = 0.016)。此外,血浆四氢大麻酚与纹状体氨浓度呈正相关(P < 0.001),与纹状体GS活性呈负相关(P = 0.030)。在30分钟时,我们发现纹状体氨显著增加(P < 0.0001),同时血浆氨浓度也显著升高(P = 0.042)。总之,这些研究结果表明大麻摄入导致人类大麻使用者血浆氨浓度出现时间和途径依赖性升高,并降低了小鼠大脑GS活性,同时升高了小鼠大脑和血浆氨浓度。