Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA; Department of Neuroscience, The Scripps Research Institute; La Jolla, CA, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA; Colorado College, Colorado Springs, CO, USA.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2021 Aug;207:173222. doi: 10.1016/j.pbb.2021.173222. Epub 2021 Jun 29.
Despite a long history of use in synaptic physiology, the lobster has been a neglected model for behavioral pharmacology. A restaurateur proposed that exposing lobster to cannabis smoke reduces anxiety and pain during the cooking process. It is unknown if lobster gill respiration in air would result in significant Δ-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) uptake and whether this would have any detectable behavioral effects.
The primary goal was to determine tissue THC levels in the lobster after exposure to THC vapor. Secondary goals were to determine if THC vapor altered locomotor behavior or nociception.
Tissue samples were collected (including muscle, brain and hemolymph) from Homarus americanus (N = 3 per group) following 30 or 60 min of exposure to vapor generated by an e-cigarette device using THC (100 mg/mL in a propylene glycol vehicle). Separate experiments assessed locomotor behavior and hot water nociceptive responses following THC vapor exposure.
THC vapor produced duration-related THC levels in all tissues examined. Locomotor activity was decreased (distance, speed, time-mobile) by 30 min inhalation of THC. Lobsters exhibit a temperature-dependent withdrawal response to immersion of tail, antennae or claws in warm water; this is novel evidence of thermal nociception for this species. THC exposure for 60 min had only marginal effect on nociception under the conditions assessed.
Vapor exposure of lobsters, using an e-cigarette based model, produces dose-dependent THC levels in all tissues and reduces locomotor activity. Hot water nociception was temperature dependent, but only minimal anti-nociceptive effect of THC exposure was confirmed.
尽管在突触生理学中已有很长的应用历史,但龙虾一直是行为药理学中被忽视的模型。一位餐馆老板提出,将龙虾暴露在大麻烟雾中可以减少烹饪过程中的焦虑和疼痛。目前尚不清楚龙虾在空气中的鳃呼吸是否会导致显著的四氢大麻酚(THC)摄取,以及这是否会产生任何可检测的行为影响。
主要目标是确定龙虾在暴露于 THC 蒸气后组织中的 THC 水平。次要目标是确定 THC 蒸气是否会改变运动行为或伤害感受。
从美洲螯龙虾(Homarus americanus)中收集组织样本(包括肌肉、大脑和血淋巴)(每组 3 个样本),这些龙虾在暴露于电子烟设备产生的 THC 蒸气 30 或 60 分钟后(丙二醇载体中的 100 mg/mL THC)。单独的实验评估了 THC 蒸气暴露后运动行为和热水伤害感受反应。
所有检查的组织中,THC 蒸气产生了与时间相关的 THC 水平。30 分钟的 THC 吸入使运动活动减少(距离、速度、活动时间)。龙虾对尾巴、触角或爪子浸入热水表现出温度依赖性的退缩反应;这是该物种热伤害感受的新证据。在评估的条件下,60 分钟的 THC 暴露对伤害感受的影响只有轻微的影响。
使用基于电子烟的模型对龙虾进行蒸气暴露会在所有组织中产生剂量依赖性的 THC 水平,并降低运动活动。热水伤害感受是温度依赖性的,但仅证实了 THC 暴露的最小抗伤害感受作用。