Habenula在尼古丁成瘾中的作用。

Philip R Baldwin, Raul Alanis, Ramiro Salas
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引用次数: 59

摘要

为了在任何特定的环境中茁壮成长,可移动的生物必须能够从成功和失败事件的结果中学习。为了从成功中学习,大脑依赖于源自腹侧被盖区和黑质的信号,这些信号导致纹状体中多巴胺的释放增加。最近,研究表明,从失望中学习的大脑依赖于来自外侧束的信号,这间接抑制了多巴胺能的活动。habenula是一个小的大脑区域,在老鼠身上被证明对尼古丁戒断症状的出现至关重要。烟碱乙酰胆碱受体亚基在小鼠中表达是观察戒断症状所必需的,并且仅阻断烟碱活性在内侧habenula中就足以促使依赖小鼠戒断。此外,最近的基因组广泛关联研究表明,在人类中,相同的尼古丁受体亚基的遗传变异至少部分地导致了成为吸烟者的遗传易感性。habenula不仅与尼古丁有关,还与其他几种药物的作用有关。我们假设,持续使用滥用药物导致habenular hyperactivity作为人为增加多巴胺释放的代偿机制。药物戒断会导致非补偿性habenular hyperactivity,并且可以被认为是一种持续失望的状态(或消极的情绪状态),导致反复使用药物。我们相信,改变habenular活动的药物可能是对抗吸烟和药物成瘾的有效疗法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Role of the Habenula in Nicotine Addiction.

To thrive in any given environment, mobile creatures must be able to learn from the outcomes of both successful and disappointing events. To learn from success, the brain relies on signals originating in the ventral tegmental area and substantia nigra that result in increased release of dopamine in the striatum. Recently, it was shown that to learn from disappointment the brain relies on signals originating in the lateral habenula, which indirectly inhibit dopaminergic activity. The habenula is a small brain region that has been shown in mice to be critical for the appearance of nicotine withdrawal symptoms. The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunits expressed in the medial habenula are necessary to observe withdrawal symptoms in mice, and blocking nicotinic activity in the medial habenula only is sufficient to precipitate withdrawal in dependent mice. In addition, recent genome wide association studies have shown that in humans, genetic variants in the same nicotinic receptor subunits are at least partially responsible for the genetic predisposition to become a smoker. The habenula is linked not only to nicotine, but also to the effects of several other drugs. We postulate that the continuous use of drugs of abuse results in habenular hyperactivity as a compensatory mechanism for artificially elevated dopamine release. Drug withdrawal would then result in non-compensated habenular hyperactivity, and could be thought of as a state of continuous disappointment (or a negative emotional state), driving repeated drug use. We believe that drugs that alter habenular activity may be effective therapies against tobacco smoke and drug addiction in general.

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