The Laboratory of the Biology of Addictive Diseases, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10065, United States.
Research Bioinformatics, CCTS, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10065, United States.
Neuroscience. 2018 Nov 21;393:333-349. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2018.07.032. Epub 2018 Jul 29.
Prescription opioid abuse, for example of oxycodone, is a pressing public health issue. This study focuses on how chronic oxycodone self-administration (SA) affects the reward pathways in the mouse brain. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the expression of reward-related genes in the ventral and dorsal striatum, areas involved in different aspects of opioid addiction models, was altered within 1 h after chronic oxycodone SA, using transcriptome-wide sequencing (RNA-seq). Based on results from earlier human genetic and rodent preclinical studies, we focused on a set of genes that may be associated with the development of addictive diseases and the rewarding effect of drugs of abuse, primarily in the opioid, stress response and classical neurotransmitter systems. We found that 32 transcripts in the ventral striatum, and 7 in the dorsal striatum, were altered significantly in adult mice that had self-administered oxycodone (n = 5) for 14 consecutive days (4 h/day) compared with yoked saline controls (n = 5). The following 5 genes in the ventral striatum showed experiment-wise significant changes: proopiomelanocortin (Pomc) and serotonin 5-HT-2A receptor (Htr2a) were upregulated; serotonin receptor 7 (Htr7), galanin receptor1 (Galr1) and glycine receptor 1 (Glra1) were downregulated. Some genes detected by RNA-seq were confirmed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Conclusion: A RNA-seq study shows that chronic oxycodone SA alters the expression of several reward-related genes in the dorsal and ventral striatum. These results suggest potential mechanisms underlying neuronal adaptation to chronic oxycodone self-exposure, of relevance to our mechanistic understanding of prescription opioid abuse.
例如,处方类阿片类药物滥用(oxycodone)是一个紧迫的公共卫生问题。本研究专注于慢性 oxycodone 自我给药(SA)如何影响小鼠大脑中的奖励通路。在本研究中,我们使用转录组测序(RNA-seq)测试了以下假设,即在慢性 oxycodone SA 后 1 小时内,腹侧和背侧纹状体(涉及不同方面的阿片类药物成瘾模型的区域)中的奖励相关基因的表达会发生改变。基于早期人类遗传和啮齿动物临床前研究的结果,我们重点关注了一组可能与成瘾性疾病的发展和滥用药物的奖励作用相关的基因,主要涉及阿片类、应激反应和经典神经递质系统。我们发现,与接受盐水对照(n = 5)相比,连续 14 天(每天 4 小时)自我给予 oxycodone 的成年小鼠的腹侧纹状体中有 32 个转录本,背侧纹状体中有 7 个转录本发生了显著改变(n = 5)。腹侧纹状体中有 5 个基因的表达发生了实验性显著变化:前阿黑皮素原(Pomc)和 5-羟色胺 5-HT-2A 受体(Htr2a)上调;5-羟色胺受体 7(Htr7)、甘丙肽受体 1(Galr1)和甘氨酸受体 1(Glra1)下调。通过 RNA-seq 检测到的一些基因通过定量聚合酶链反应(qPCR)得到了证实。结论:RNA-seq 研究表明,慢性 oxycodone SA 改变了背侧和腹侧纹状体中几个与奖励相关的基因的表达。这些结果提示了神经元适应慢性 oxycodone 自我暴露的潜在机制,有助于我们对处方类阿片类药物滥用的机制理解。