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Saturday, 2 November 2013
Wednesday, 11 September 2013
Novel Opiate Addiction Switch in the Brain Discovered Read more: Novel Opiate Addiction Switch in the Brain Discovered
The molecular process by which opiate addiction develops in the
brain has been identified by neuroscientists. Opiate addiction is largely
controlled by the formation of powerful reward memories that link the
pleasurable effects of opiate-class drugs to environmental triggers that induce
drug craving in individuals addicted to opiates. The research is published in
the September 11th issue of The Journal of Neuroscience.
The Addiction Research Group led by Steven Laviolette of the
Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry was able to identify how exposure
to heroin induces a specific switch in a memory molecule in a region of the
brain called the basolateral amygdala, which is involved importantly in
controlling memories related to opiate addiction, withdrawal, and relapse.
Using a rodent model of opiate addiction, Laviolette's team
found that the process of opiate addiction and withdrawal triggered a switch
between two molecular pathways in the amygdala controlling how opiate addiction
memories were formed. In the non-dependent state, they found that a molecule
called extracellular signal-related kinase or "ERK" was recruited for
early stage addiction memories. However, once opiate addiction had developed,
the scientists observed a functional switch to a separate molecular memory
pathway, controlled by a molecule called calmodulin-dependent kinase II or
"CaMKII".
"These findings will shed important new light on how the
brain is altered by opiate drugs and provide exciting new targets for the
development of novel pharmacotherapeutic treatments for individuals suffering
from chronic opiate addiction," says Laviolette, an associate professor in
the Departments of Anatomy & Cell Biology, Psychiatry, and
Psychology.
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