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1.
N-Methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor-mediated glutamatergic neurotransmission is thought to play a central role in the development of alcohol dependence and this alteration is supposed to be due to a differential up-regulation of the NR2B type of subunits. In this work, we examined the effect of some known (CP-101,606; CI-1041 and Co-101,244) and novel indole-2-carboxamide derivative NR2B subunit selective NMDA receptor antagonists (SSNAs) (RG-13579 and RG-1103) on the neurotoxic effect of withdrawal in ethanol pre-treated cultures of rat cortical neurones. The extent of neurotoxicity was estimated by measuring the activity of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) that was released into the culture medium during the 24h withdrawal period. Here, we demonstrate that NR2B SSNAs given in the course of the withdrawal potently reduced the LDH release in ethanol pre-treated cultures. One of our novel compound, RG-1103, proved to be more potent than the reference NR2B SSNAs tested in this work having similar potency as the most potent but non-subunit selective NMDA receptor antagonist dizocilpine (MK-801). Acamprosate, a currently used therapeutic drug for the treatment of alcoholism was also effective although only in high micromolar concentrations. According to these observations, NR2B SSNAs are potent inhibitors of ethanol-withdrawal-induced neurotoxicity and considering that these agents have acceptable side effect profiles, they could be promising therapeutic candidates in the pharmacotherapy for physical signs of acute alcohol-withdrawal and associated neuronal damage.  相似文献   

2.
Role of glutamatergic and GABAergic systems in alcoholism   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The pharmacological effects of ethanol are complex and widespread without a well-defined target. Since glutamatergic and GABAergic innervation are both dense and diffuse and account for more than 80% of the neuronal circuitry in the human brain, alterations in glutamatergic and GABAergic function could affect the function of all neurotransmitter systems. Here, we review recent progress in glutamatergic and GABAergic systems with a special focus on their roles in alcohol dependence and alcohol withdrawal-induced seizures. In particular, NMDA-receptors appear to play a central role in alcohol dependence and alcohol-induced neurological disorders. Hence, NMDA receptor antagonists may have multiple functions in treating alcoholism and other addictions and they may become important therapeutics for numerous disorders including epilepsy, Parkinson's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Huntington's chorea, anxiety, neurotoxicity, ischemic stroke, and chronic pain. One of the new family of NMDA receptor antagonists, such as DETC-MESO, which regulate the redox site of NMDA receptors, may prove to be the drug of choice for treating alcoholism as well as many neurological diseases.  相似文献   

3.
Pineal function during ethanol intoxication, dependence, and withdrawal   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Pineal melatonin and serotonin content were determined during one to four days of continuous intoxication, and during the alcohol withdrawal syndrome. The nocturnal rise in pineal melatonin was blunted in continuously intoxicated animals, however this was found to be unrelated to duration of treatment. The initial dependent-intoxicated phase of the alcohol withdrawal syndrome produced a reduction of nocturnal pineal melatonin content with a concomitant elevation in pineal serotonin. The overt withdrawal phase of the alcohol withdrawal syndrome had no effect on pineal melatonin or serotonin content. This data suggests that ethanol may perturb pineal melatonin synthesis either directly, or indirectly by altered receptor function. Contrary to our expectations the pineal may not be a useful model to probe the physiology of increased noradrenergic neurotransmission produced by ethanol withdrawal.  相似文献   

4.
Severe cellular damage and neuronal cell loss were previously observed in cultures of primary cortical neurones after chronic ethanol pre-treatment followed by ethanol-withdrawal. In this study, we investigated the circumstances and the possible cellular changes leading to alcohol-withdrawal induced neuronal cell death. When cultures were pre-treated with ethanol (25-200mM) once for 24 or 72h, the amount of the subsequent 24h alcohol-withdrawal induced cell death-estimated by measuring the release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)-was elevated only in cultures pre-treated with 200mM ethanol for 72h. On the contrary, as little as 50mM ethanol produced significant (P<0.01) increase in the withdrawal induced LDH-release in cultures pre-treated repeatedly with ethanol once daily for three consecutive days. When ethanol was re-added to the cultures during the withdrawal period, the LDH-release was dose-dependently reduced to the level of control. In ethanol pre-treated cultures N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) (0.01-1mM) induced excitotoxicity as well as NMDA evoked elevation of cytosolic calcium ion concentration was increased. In contrast, the depolarising agent veratridine (0.01-1mM) produced similar extent of neuronal injury and elevation in cytosolic calcium ion concentration in control as in ethanol pre-treated cultures. According to these observations, repeated ethanol treatment appears to cause more robust adaptive changes in cultured neurones leading to more pronounced withdrawal induced cellular damage than chronic but single treatment does. In addition, the glutamatergic neurotransmission, especially the NMDA receptor system seems to be highly involved in the adaptive changes and in the cytotoxic effect of alcohol-withdrawal.  相似文献   

5.
Nucleus accumbens (nAcb), a major site of action of drugs of abuse and dopamine (DA) signalling in MSNs (medium spiny neurons), is critically involved in mediating behavioural responses of drug addiction. Most studies have evaluated the effects of DA on MSN firing properties but thus far, the effects of DA on a cellular circuit involving glutamatergic afferents to the nAcb have remained rather elusive. In this study we attempted to characterize the effects of dopamine (DA) on evoked glutamatergic excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) in nAcb medium spiny (MS) neurons in 1 to 21 day-old rat pups. The EPSCs evoked by local nAcb stimuli displayed both AMPA/KA and NMDA receptor-mediated components. The addition of DA to the superfusing medium produced a marked decrease of both components of the EPSCs that did not change during the postnatal period studied. Pharmacologically isolated AMPA/KA receptor-mediated response was inhibited on average by 40% whereas the isolated NMDA receptor-mediated EPSC was decreased by 90%. The effect of DA on evoked EPSCs were mimicked by the D1-like receptor agonist SKF 38393 and antagonized by the D1-like receptor antagonist SCH 23390 whereas D2-like receptor agonist or antagonist respectively failed to mimic or to block the action of DA. DA did not change the membrane input conductance of MS neurons or the characteristics of EPSCs produced by the local administration of glutamate in the presence of tetrodotoxin. In contrast, DA altered the paired-pulse ratio of evoked EPSCs. The present results show that the activation D1-like dopaminergic receptors modulate glutamatergic neurotransmission by preferentially inhibiting NMDA receptor-mediated EPSC through presynaptic mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
In our previous experiments, severe cellular damages and neuronal cell loss were observed following 24h of alcohol withdrawal in primary cultures of rat cortical neurones pre-treated with ethanol (50-200 mM) repeatedly for 3 days. Increased NMDA induced cytosolic calcium responses and excitotoxicity were also demonstrated in the ethanol pre-treated cultures. Thus, the enhancement in functions of NMDA receptors was supposed to be involved in the adaptive changes leading to the neurotoxic effect of alcohol-withdrawal. In this study, we investigated the effect of the 3-day repeated ethanol (100 mM) treatment on the function and subunit composition of the NMDA receptors. Here, we demonstrate that the maximal inhibitory effect of ethanol was significantly increased after ethanol pre-treatment. Similarly, the inhibitory activity of the NR2B subunit selective antagonists threo-ifenprodil, CP-101,606 and CI-1041 was also enhanced. On the contrary, the efficiency of the channel blocker agent MK-801 and the glycine-site selective antagonist 5,7-dichlorokynurenic acid was the same as in control cultures. According to these observations, a shift in subunit expression in favour for the NR2B subunit was suggested. Indeed, we provided evidence for increased expression of the NR2B and the C1 and C2' cassette containing splice variant forms of the NR1 subunit proteins in ethanol pre-treated cultures in further experiments using a flow cytometry based immunocytochemical method. These changes may constitute the basis of the increased NMDA receptor functions and subsequently the enhanced sensitivity of ethanol pre-treated cortical neurones to excitotoxic insults resulting in increased neuronal cell loss after ethanol withdrawal. Such alterations may play a role in the neuronal adaptation to ethanol as well as in the development of alcohol dependence, and might cause neuronal cell loss in certain areas of the brain during alcohol withdrawal.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Adolescence is a developmental period which the risk of drug and alcohol abuse increases. Since mesolimbic dopaminergic system undergoes developmental changes during adolescence, and this system is involved in rewarding effects of drugs of abuse, we addressed the hypothesis that ethanol exposure during juvenile/adolescent period over-activates mesolimbic dopaminergic system inducing adaptations which can trigger long-term enduring behavioural effects of alcohol abuse. We treated juvenile/adolescent or adult rats with ethanol (3 g/kg) for two-consecutive days at 48-h intervals over 14-day period. Here we show that intermittent ethanol treatment during the juvenile/adolescence period alters subsequent ethanol intake. In vivo microdialysis demonstrates that ethanol elicits a similar prolonged dopamine response in the nucleus accumbens of both adolescent and adult animals pre-treated with multiple doses of ethanol, although the basal dopamine levels were higher in ethanol-treated adolescents than in adult-treated animals. Repeated ethanol administration also down-regulates the expression of DRD2 and NMDAR2B phosphorylation in prefrontal cortex of adolescent animals, but not of adult rats. Finally, ethanol treatment during adolescence changes the acetylation of histones H3 and H4 in frontal cortex, nucleus accumbens and striatum, suggesting chromatin remodelling changes. In summary, our findings demonstrate the sensitivity of adolescent brain to ethanol effects on dopaminergic and glutamatergic neurotransmission, and suggest that abnormal plasticity in reward-related processes and epigenetic mechanisms could contribute to the vulnerability of adolescents to alcohol addiction.  相似文献   

9.
Excessive glutamatergic neurotransmission, particularly when mediated by the N:-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) subtype of glutamate receptor, is thought to underlie neuronal death in a number of neurological disorders. Histamine has been reported to potentiate NMDA receptor-mediated events under a variety of conditions. In the present study we have utilized primary hippocampal neurone cultures to investigate the effect of mast cell-derived, as well as exogenously applied, histamine on neurotoxicity evoked by excessive synaptic activity. Exposure of mature cultures for 15 min to an Mg(2+)-free/glycine-containing buffer to trigger synaptic transmission through NMDA receptors, caused a 30-35% neuronal loss over 24 h. When co-cultured with hippocampal neurones, activated mast cells increased excitotoxic injury to 60%, an effect that was abolished in the presence of histaminase. Similarly, addition of histamine during magnesium deprivation produced a concentration-dependent potentiation (+ 60%; EC(50) : 5 microM) of neuronal death which was inhibited by sodium channel blockers and NMDA receptor antagonists, although this effect did not involve known histamine receptors. The histamine effect was further potentiated by acidification of the culture medium. Cultures 'preconditioned' by sublethal (5 min) Mg(2+) deprivation exhibited less neuronal death than controls when exposed to a more severe insult. NMDA receptor activation and the extracellular regulated kinase cascade were required for preconditioning neuroprotection. The finding that histamine potentiates NMDA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity may have important implications for our understanding of conditions where enhanced glutamatergic neurotransmission is observed in conjunction with tissue acidification, such as cerebral ischaemia and epilepsy.  相似文献   

10.
Glutamate-mediated neurotransmission may be involved in the range of adaptive changes in brain which occur after ethanol administration in laboratory animals, and in chronic alcoholism in human cases. Excitatory amino acid transmission is modulated by a complex system of receptors and other effectors, the efficacy of which can be profoundly affected by altered gene or protein expression. Local variations in receptor composition may underlie intrinsic regional variations in susceptibility to pathological change. Equally, ethanol use and abuse may bring about alterations in receptor subunit expression as the essence of the adaptive response. Such considerations may underlie the regional localization characteristic of the pathogenesis of alcoholic brain damage, or they may form part of the homeostatic change that constitutes the neural substrate for alcohol dependence.  相似文献   

11.
The most dominant hypotheses for the pathogenesis of schizophrenia have focused primarily upon hyperfunctional dopaminergic and hypofunctional glutamatergic neurotransmission in the central nervous system. The therapeutic efficacy of all atypical antipsychotics is explained in part by antagonism of the dopaminergic neurotransmission, mainly by blockade of D2 dopamine receptors. N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor hypofunction in schizophrenia can be reversed by glycine transporter type-1 (GlyT-1) inhibitors, which regulate glycine concentrations at the vicinity of NMDA receptors. Combined drug administration with D2 dopamine receptor blockade and activation of hypofunctional NMDA receptors may be needed for a more effective treatment of positive and negative symptoms and the accompanied cognitive deficit in schizophrenia. To investigate this type of combined drug administration, rats were treated with the atypical antipsychotic risperidone together with the GlyT-1 inhibitor Org-24461. Brain microdialysis was applied in the striatum of conscious rats and determinations of extracellular dopamine, DOPAC, HVA, glycine, glutamate, and serine concentrations were carried out using HPLC/electrochemistry. Risperidone increased extracellular concentrations of dopamine but failed to influence those of glycine or glutamate measured in microdialysis samples. Org-24461 injection reduced extracellular dopamine concentrations and elevated extracellular glycine levels but the concentrations of serine and glutamate were not changed. When risperidone and Org-24461 were added in combination, a decrease in extracellular dopamine concentrations was accompanied with sustained elevation of extracellular glycine levels. Interestingly, the extracellular concentrations of glutamate were also enhanced. Our data indicate that coadministration of an antipsychotic with a GlyT-1 inhibitor may normalize hypofunctional NMDA receptor-mediated glutamatergic neurotransmission with reduced dopaminergic side effects characteristic for antipsychotic medication.  相似文献   

12.
The study of the relationships between alcohol consumption and central neurotransmission is difficult: they are different from one individual to another, from one neurotransmission system to another and from one cerebral area to another. Moreover, there is no fully satisfactory animal model of alcoholism and the human studies have to cope with a lot of methodological problems. In spite of these difficulties a bidirectional relationship between alcohol and central neurotransmission is well established. Neuronal dysfunctions are the neurobiological basis for the alcohol behaviour, and ethanol craving seems specifically related to hypofunction of the noradrenergic, GABAergic and serotoninergic systems, and maintained by a positive reinforcement mediated by the dopaminergic and opioid systems. Ethanol alters almost all membrane functions, but it behaves essentially like a barbiturate-type GABAergic agonist. In the short-term, it also stimulates central monoaminergic neurotransmissions. With chronic intoxication, membrane tolerance develops, which is the substratum for tolerance and dependence. Concurrently there are adaptative processes and a depletion of the capacities for synthesis of neurotransmitters, therefore a hypofunctioning of all neurotransmission systems. This hypofunctioning is an additive mechanism for tolerance and dependence, pushing the individual into drinking always more alcohol to palliate it; it is sharply revealed during withdrawal, particularly the GABAergic deficiency.  相似文献   

13.
The ionotropic glutamatergic receptor system, especially the subtype mediated by N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA), is known to exhibit special sensitivity to the effect of ethanol. This is due partly to the ability of ethanol to modulate the production of nitric oxide through the NMDA-nitric oxide synthase (NOS) pathway. In this study, we examined the effects of ethanol on basal and NMDA-stimulated NOS activity in rat hippocampal slices by measuring the conversion of [(14)C]-arginine into [(14)C]-citrulline in an incubation system containing the necessary cofactors. Stimulation of hippocampal slices with NMDA (100 microM) enhanced NOS activity by 43% (n = 12). Although ethanol did not alter NOS activity when added to the incubation system during NMDA stimulation, it dose-dependently inhibited NMDA-NOS activity when added to the slices during the 90-min preincubation period. Further assay of NOS activity with brain cytosolic fraction indicated an inhibitory effect of ethanol (200 mM) when the assay was carried out in the absence of exogenous tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), a redox-active cofactor for NOS. Incubation of brain homogenates resulted in a time-dependent increase in the levels of lipid peroxidation products, but ethanol did not further enhance these products. Taken together, these results provide evidence for the role of BH4 but not oxidative stress in the inhibitory effect of ethanol on NMDA-NOS activity in rat hippocampal slices.  相似文献   

14.
Adenosine, by acting on adenosine A(1) and A(2A) receptors, exerts opposite modulatory roles on striatal extracellular levels of glutamate and dopamine, with activation of A(1) inhibiting and activation of A(2A) receptors stimulating glutamate and dopamine release. Adenosine-mediated modulation of striatal dopaminergic neurotransmission could be secondary to changes in glutamate neurotransmission, in view of evidence for a preferential colocalization of A(1) and A(2A) receptors in glutamatergic nerve terminals. By using in vivo microdialysis techniques, local perfusion of NMDA (3, 10 microm), the selective A(2A) receptor agonist 2-p-(2-carboxyethyl)phenethylamino-5'-N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosine (CGS 21680; 3, 10 microm), the selective A(1) receptor antagonist 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dimethylxanthine (CPT; 300, 1000 microm), or the non-selective A(1)-A(2A) receptor antagonist in vitro caffeine (300, 1000 microm) elicited significant increases in extracellular levels of dopamine in the shell of the nucleus accumbens (NAc). Significant glutamate release was also observed with local perfusion of CGS 21680, CPT and caffeine, but not NMDA. Co-perfusion with the competitive NMDA receptor antagonist dl-2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid (APV; 100 microm) counteracted dopamine release induced by NMDA, CGS 21680, CPT and caffeine. Co-perfusion with the selective A(2A) receptor antagonist MSX-3 (1 microm) counteracted dopamine and glutamate release induced by CGS 21680, CPT and caffeine and did not modify dopamine release induced by NMDA. These results indicate that modulation of dopamine release in the shell of the NAc by A(1) and A(2A) receptors is mostly secondary to their opposite modulatory role on glutamatergic neurotransmission and depends on stimulation of NMDA receptors. Furthermore, these results underscore the role of A(1) vs. A(2A) receptor antagonism in the central effects of caffeine.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The study of alcohol dependence mechanisms has been aided by work in rodents, where regimens of intermittent chronic administration with repeated episodes of intoxication and withdrawal can be coupled with controlled timing of in vitro studies and the possibility of relating them to behavior. The chronic intermittent ethanol (CIE) model in the rat has been found to be a good model of human alcohol dependence, showing persistent signs of withdrawal and self-administration. Studies in CIE rats suggest that plastic changes in GABA-mediated inhibition involving the GABAA receptor system may be responsible for the behavioral alterations. Here we summarize a combination of evidence that the alcoholic rat CIE model demonstrates changes in GABAA receptor subunit levels, in receptor localization, and in physiology and pharmacology, leading to alterations in behavior that contribute to the hyperexcitable alcohol withdrawal state (anxiety, insomnia, seizure susceptibility) and alcohol dependence. Special Issue dedicated to Dr. Simo S. Oja  相似文献   

17.
Ethanol, added to primary cultures of cerebellar granule neurons simultaneously with NMDA, was previously shown to inhibit the anti-apoptotic effect of NMDA. The in vitro anti-apoptotic effect of NMDA is believed to mimic in vivo protection against apoptosis afforded by innervation of developing cerebellar granule neurons by glutamatergic mossy fibers. Therefore, the results suggested that the presence of ethanol in the brain at a critical period of development would promote apoptosis. In the present studies, we examined the effect of chronic ethanol exposure on the anti-apoptotic action of NMDA in cerebellar granule neurons. The neurons were treated with ethanol in vitro for 1-3 days in the absence of NMDA. Even after ethanol was removed from the culture medium, as ascertained by gas chromatography, the protective effect of added NMDA was significantly attenuated. The decreased anti-apoptotic effect of NMDA was associated with a change in the properties of the NMDA receptor, as indicated by a decrease in ligand binding, decreased expression of NMDA receptor subunit proteins, and decreased functional responses including stimulation of increases in intracellular Ca(2+) and induction of brain-derived neurotrophic factor expression. The latter effect may directly underlie the attenuated protective effect of NMDA in these neurons. The results suggest that ethanol exposure during development can have long-lasting effects on neuronal survival. The change in the NMDA receptor caused by chronic ethanol treatment may contribute to the loss of cerebellar granule neurons that is observed in animals and humans exposed to ethanol during gestation.  相似文献   

18.
We analyzed global patterns of expression in genes related to glutamatergic neurotransmission (glutamatergic genes) in healthy human adult brain before determining the effects of chronic alcohol and cocaine exposure on gene expression in the hippocampus. RNA‐Seq data from ‘BrainSpan’ was obtained across 16 brain regions from nine control adults. We also generated RNA‐Seq data from postmortem hippocampus from eight alcoholics, eight cocaine addicts and eight controls. Expression analyses were undertaken of 28 genes encoding glutamate ionotropic (AMPA, kainate, NMDA) and metabotropic receptor subunits, together with glutamate transporters. The expression of each gene was fairly consistent across the brain with the exception of the cerebellum, the thalamic mediodorsal nucleus and the striatum. GRIN1, encoding the essential NMDA subunit, had the highest expression across all brain regions. Six factors accounted for 84% of the variance in global gene expression. GRIN2B (encoding GluN2B), was up‐regulated in both alcoholics and cocaine addicts (FDR corrected P = 0.008). Alcoholics showed up‐regulation of three genes relative to controls and cocaine addicts: GRIA4 (encoding GluA4), GRIK3 (GluR7) and GRM4 (mGluR4). Expression of both GRM3 (mGluR3) and GRIN2D (GluN2D) was up‐regulated in alcoholics and down‐regulated in cocaine addicts relative to controls. Glutamatergic genes are moderately to highly expressed throughout the brain. Six factors explain nearly all the variance in global gene expression. At least in the hippocampus, chronic alcohol use largely up‐regulates glutamatergic genes. The NMDA GluN2B receptor subunit might be implicated in a common pathway to addiction, possibly in conjunction with the GABAB1 receptor subunit.  相似文献   

19.
Thorsell A 《Peptides》2007,28(2):480-483
Neuropeptide Y has a role in alcohol intake and dependence. NPY's effect on alcohol intake appears to be in part dependent on the individual's history of alcohol dependence. In models of high intake such as alcohol-preferring, selectively bred rat lines (e.g., the P-line and the HAD line), as well as in ethanol-vapor-exposed subjects, NPY modulates alcohol intake while leaving it unaffected during baseline conditions. The primary receptor subtype mediating NPY's effect on ethanol intake remains in question. The Y2-antagonist BIIE0246 significantly suppresses ethanol intake in an operant paradigm with a sensitization to the effect of BIIE0246 in vapor-exposed subjects. We propose the NPY system to be one of the most interesting target systems for the development of treatments for alcohol abuse and dependence.  相似文献   

20.
Ohkuma S  Katsura M  Tsujimura A 《Life sciences》2001,68(11):1215-1222
Mechanisms for formation of drug dependence and expression of withdrawal syndrome have not fully clarified despite of huge accumulation of experimental and clinical data at present. Several clinical features of withdrawal syndrome are considered to be common among patients with drug dependence induced by different drugs of abuse. One of them is anxiety. Recent investigations have revealed that diazepam binding inhibitor (DBI), a peptide consisting of 87 amino acids with molecular weight of about 10 kDa, serves as an inverse agonist for benzodiazepine (BZD) receptors with endogenously anxiogenic potential. These lines of data suggest that cerebral DBI expression in brain may participates in formation of drug dependence and/or emergence of withdrawal syndrome. Based on this working hypothesis, we have examined DBI expression in the brain derived from mice depended on alcohol (ethanol), nicotine, and morphine to investigate functional relationship between cerebral DBI expression and drug dependence. Cerebral DBI expression significantly increases in animals with drug dependence induced by these drugs, and in the cases of nicotine- and morphine-dependent mice concomitant administration of antagonists for nicotinic acetylcholine and opioid receptors, respectively, abolished the increase. Abrupt cessation of administration of drugs facilitated further increase in DBI expression. Therefore, these alterations in DBI expression have close relationship with formation of drug dependence and/or emergence of withdrawal syndrome, and are considered to be a common biochemical process in drug dependence induced by different drugs of abuse. Finding and elucidation of mechanisms for common biochemical alterations among drug dependence may provide a clue to clarify mechanisms for formation of drug dependence and/or emergence of withdrawal syndrome.  相似文献   

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