Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, 3811 O'Hara St., Pittsburgh, PA 15213, United States; Center for Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, 4200 Fifth Ave, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, United States; Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, University of Pittsburgh, 4400 Fifth Ave, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, United States.
Center for Neuroscience, University of Pittsburgh, 4200 Fifth Ave, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, United States.
Brain Res Bull. 2018 Jul;141:58-71. doi: 10.1016/j.brainresbull.2017.09.003. Epub 2017 Sep 13.
The successful treatment of substance use disorders is dependent on the establishment of a long-term abstinent state. Relapse can be suppressed by interfering with memories of drug use that are evoked by re-exposure to drug-associated contexts and cues. Two strategies for accomplishing this goal are either to prevent drug-memory reconsolidation or to induce the formation of a competing, extinction memory. However, clinical attempts to prolong abstinence by behavioral modification of drug-related memories have had limited success. One approach to improve behavioral treatment strategies is to identify the molecular mechanisms that regulate these memory processes and then use pharmacological tools as supplements to improve efficacy. Still, due to the involvement of several overlapping signaling cascades in both reconsolidation and extinction, it is difficult to specifically modify one of the two processes. For example, attempting to elicit extinction may instead initiate reconsolidation, resulting in the unintentional strengthening of drug-related memories. A better approach is to identify diverging components of the two processes, whereby a single medication would simultaneously weaken reconsolidation and enhance extinction. This review will provide an overview of the neural substrates that are involved in the regulation of drug-associated memories, and will discuss emerging approaches to pharmacologically weaken these memories, including recent efforts to precisely and bidirectionally target reconsolidation and extinction. Ultimately, pharmacologically-enhanced memory-based approaches have the potential to produce more informed relapse-prevention therapies.
物质使用障碍的成功治疗取决于建立长期的戒断状态。通过干扰因重新接触药物相关环境和线索而引起的药物使用记忆,可以抑制复发。实现这一目标的两种策略是防止药物记忆再巩固或诱导形成竞争的、灭绝的记忆。然而,通过对与药物相关的记忆进行行为修正来延长戒断时间的临床尝试收效甚微。改善行为治疗策略的一种方法是确定调节这些记忆过程的分子机制,然后使用药理学工具作为补充来提高疗效。尽管如此,由于再巩固和灭绝过程中涉及几个重叠的信号级联,很难专门修改这两个过程之一。例如,试图引发灭绝可能会引发再巩固,从而导致与药物相关的记忆意外增强。更好的方法是识别这两个过程的不同成分,从而一种药物可以同时削弱再巩固和增强灭绝。这篇综述将概述参与调节药物相关记忆的神经基质,并讨论新兴的药理学削弱这些记忆的方法,包括最近为精确和双向靶向再巩固和灭绝所做的努力。最终,基于记忆的药理学增强方法有可能产生更具信息性的预防复发的治疗方法。