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In-Vitro and In-Vivo Action of Cannabinoids
Authors:Akinshola  B E  Chakrabarti  A  Onaivi  E S
Institution:(1) Department of Pharmacology, Howard University College of Medicine, Washington sDC, 20059;(2) Department of Psychiatry and Pharmacology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, 37232;(3) Department of Psychiatry (MCN 2213), Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, 37232
Abstract:The discovery of endocannabinoids such as anandamide and the wide spread localization of cannabinoid receptors in the brain and peripheral tissues, suggests that the cannabinoid system represents a previously unrecognized ubiquitous net work in the nervous system, whose physiology and function is unfolding. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that some of the actions of anandamide are independent of a cannabinoid receptor mechanism. This was accomplished by the use of cannabinoid agonist and antagonist interaction in an in-vitro and in-vivo test systems. In-vitro, we used Xenopus laevis oocytes expression system and two-voltage clamp technique in combination with differential display polymerase chain reaction to determine whether the differential display of genes following treatment with anandamide may be linked to AMPA glutamate receptor. The differential expression of genes in vivo after the sub-acute administration of anandamide could not be directly linked with the AMPA glutamate receptor. In the voltage clamp studies we investigated the effects of anandamide on recombinant AMPA GluR3 sub-unit currents generated by kainic acid in oocytes expressing the AMPA glutamate receptor. In the in-vitro studies, we present evidence that anandamide inhibited the kainate activated currents in oocytes expressing AMPA glutamate receptor involves cAMP transduction via a cannabinoid receptor independent mechanism. In the in-vivo studies, SR141716A, the CB1 antagonist, induced anxiolysis, that was dependent on the mouse strain used in the anxiety model and blocked the anxiogenic effects of anandamide or methanandamide whereas SR141716A had no effect on the anandamide inhibition of kainate activated currents in-vitro.
Keywords:Anandamide  AMPA GluR3 receptor subunit  cannabinoid CB1 receptor  cAMP  gene expression  cannabinoid antagonist  SR141716A  Xenopus oocytes
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