Nestler E J
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven CT.
Crit Rev Neurobiol. 1993;7(1):23-39.
This review focuses on the long-term adaptations opiates and cocaine induce in specific regions of the nervous system that underlie the additive actions of the drugs, and the mechanisms by which such adaptations are achieved. To date, opiate and cocaine regulation of post-receptor, intracellular messenger pathways has shed considerable light on the mechanisms underlying chronic drug action. Of particular interest is the up-regulation of the cyclic AMP pathway observed in the locus coeruleus (LC), a brain region involved in physical opiate addition, in response to chronic opiate administration. Up-regulation of the cyclic AMP pathway has been shown to contribute to the opiate tolerance, dependence, and withdrawal exhibited by these neurons electrophysiologically. A similar up-regulation of the cyclic AMP pathway in response to chronic opiate and chronic cocaine treatments has been observed in the mesolimbic dopamine system, which is implicated in the psychological aspects of drug addiction. Several lines of evidence suggest the possibility that these biochemical adaptations may contribute to opiate and cocaine regulation of this neural pathway. Related studies in inbred rat strains raise the additional possibility that similar adaptations may contribute to individual genetic vulnerability to drug addition. Current studies are aimed at investigating opiate and cocaine regulation of transcription factors in these discrete brain regions to identify the molecular mechanisms involved in drug action. The investigations have focused on the Fos-Jun family of immediate early gene transcription factors, and the CREB family of transcription factors, as possible mediators of the effects of chronic opiate and cocaine exposure on regulation of neuronal gene expression. Ultimately, more direct analyses are needed that make use of methods for detecting changes in target gene expression in vivo. Together, these studies of opiate and cocaine action will help define the precise mechanisms, at the molecular level, by which these drugs of abuse alter the expression of specific genes in particular neuronal cell types and thereby produce physical and psychological aspects of drug addition.
本综述聚焦于阿片类药物和可卡因在神经系统特定区域诱导的长期适应性变化,这些变化构成了药物成瘾作用的基础,以及实现这种适应性变化的机制。迄今为止,阿片类药物和可卡因对受体后细胞内信使途径的调节,为慢性药物作用的潜在机制提供了相当多的线索。特别值得关注的是,在蓝斑(LC)中观察到的环磷酸腺苷(cAMP)途径上调,蓝斑是一个参与身体阿片类药物成瘾的脑区,这是对慢性阿片类药物给药的反应。cAMP途径的上调已被证明在电生理上促成了这些神经元表现出的阿片类药物耐受性、依赖性和戒断反应。在中脑边缘多巴胺系统中也观察到,对慢性阿片类药物和慢性可卡因治疗有类似的cAMP途径上调,该系统与药物成瘾的心理方面有关。几条证据表明,这些生化适应性变化可能促成阿片类药物和可卡因对这条神经通路的调节。对近交系大鼠品系的相关研究还提出了另一种可能性,即类似的适应性变化可能导致个体对药物成瘾的遗传易感性。目前的研究旨在调查阿片类药物和可卡因对这些离散脑区转录因子的调节作用,以确定参与药物作用的分子机制。这些研究集中在即刻早期基因转录因子的Fos-Jun家族和转录因子的CREB家族,它们可能是慢性阿片类药物和可卡因暴露对神经元基因表达调节作用的介质。最终,需要更直接的分析,利用体内检测靶基因表达变化的方法。总之,这些关于阿片类药物和可卡因作用的研究将有助于在分子水平上确定这些滥用药物改变特定神经元细胞类型中特定基因表达的精确机制,从而产生药物成瘾的生理和心理方面的影响。