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Brain Neuronal CB2 Cannabinoid Receptors in Drug Abuse and Depression: From Mice to Human Subjects

BACKGROUND: Addiction and major depression are mental health problems associated with stressful events in life with high relapse and reoccurrence even after treatment. Many laboratories were not able to detect the presence of cannabinoid CB2 receptors (CB2-Rs) in healthy brains, but there has been d...

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Autores principales: Onaivi, Emmanuel S., Ishiguro, Hiroki, Gong, Jian-Ping, Patel, Sejal, Meozzi, Paul A., Myers, Lester, Perchuk, Alex, Mora, Zoila, Tagliaferro, Patricia A., Gardner, Eileen, Brusco, Alicia, Akinshola, B. Emmanuel, Hope, Bruce, Lujilde, Javier, Inada, Toshiya, Iwasaki, Shinya, Macharia, David, Teasenfitz, Lindsey, Arinami, Tadao, Uhl, George R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2241668/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18286196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001640
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author Onaivi, Emmanuel S.
Ishiguro, Hiroki
Gong, Jian-Ping
Patel, Sejal
Meozzi, Paul A.
Myers, Lester
Perchuk, Alex
Mora, Zoila
Tagliaferro, Patricia A.
Gardner, Eileen
Brusco, Alicia
Akinshola, B. Emmanuel
Hope, Bruce
Lujilde, Javier
Inada, Toshiya
Iwasaki, Shinya
Macharia, David
Teasenfitz, Lindsey
Arinami, Tadao
Uhl, George R.
author_facet Onaivi, Emmanuel S.
Ishiguro, Hiroki
Gong, Jian-Ping
Patel, Sejal
Meozzi, Paul A.
Myers, Lester
Perchuk, Alex
Mora, Zoila
Tagliaferro, Patricia A.
Gardner, Eileen
Brusco, Alicia
Akinshola, B. Emmanuel
Hope, Bruce
Lujilde, Javier
Inada, Toshiya
Iwasaki, Shinya
Macharia, David
Teasenfitz, Lindsey
Arinami, Tadao
Uhl, George R.
author_sort Onaivi, Emmanuel S.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Addiction and major depression are mental health problems associated with stressful events in life with high relapse and reoccurrence even after treatment. Many laboratories were not able to detect the presence of cannabinoid CB2 receptors (CB2-Rs) in healthy brains, but there has been demonstration of CB2-R expression in rat microglial cells and other brain associated cells during inflammation. Therefore, neuronal expression of CB2-Rs had been ambiguous and controversial and its role in depression and substance abuse is unknown. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this study we tested the hypothesis that genetic variants of CB2 gene might be associated with depression in a human population and that alteration in CB2 gene expression may be involved in the effects of abused substances including opiates, cocaine and ethanol in rodents. Here we demonstrate that a high incidence of (Q63R) but not (H316Y) polymorphism in the CB2 gene was found in Japanese depressed subjects. CB2-Rs and their gene transcripts are expressed in the brains of naïve mice and are modulated following exposure to stressors and administration of abused drugs. Mice that developed alcohol preference had reduced CB2 gene expression and chronic treatment with JWH015 a putative CB2-R agonist, enhanced alcohol consumption in stressed but not in control mice. The direct intracerebroventricular microinjection of CB2 anti-sense oligonucleotide into the mouse brain reduced mouse aversions in the plus-maze test, indicating the functional presence of CB2-Rs in the brain that modifies behavior. We report for the using electron microscopy the sub cellular localization of CB2-Rs that are mainly on post-synaptic elements in rodent brain. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our data demonstrate the functional expression of CB2-Rs in brain that may provide novel targets for the effects of cannabinoids in depression and substance abuse disorders beyond neuro-immunocannabinoid activity.
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spelling pubmed-22416682008-02-20 Brain Neuronal CB2 Cannabinoid Receptors in Drug Abuse and Depression: From Mice to Human Subjects Onaivi, Emmanuel S. Ishiguro, Hiroki Gong, Jian-Ping Patel, Sejal Meozzi, Paul A. Myers, Lester Perchuk, Alex Mora, Zoila Tagliaferro, Patricia A. Gardner, Eileen Brusco, Alicia Akinshola, B. Emmanuel Hope, Bruce Lujilde, Javier Inada, Toshiya Iwasaki, Shinya Macharia, David Teasenfitz, Lindsey Arinami, Tadao Uhl, George R. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Addiction and major depression are mental health problems associated with stressful events in life with high relapse and reoccurrence even after treatment. Many laboratories were not able to detect the presence of cannabinoid CB2 receptors (CB2-Rs) in healthy brains, but there has been demonstration of CB2-R expression in rat microglial cells and other brain associated cells during inflammation. Therefore, neuronal expression of CB2-Rs had been ambiguous and controversial and its role in depression and substance abuse is unknown. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In this study we tested the hypothesis that genetic variants of CB2 gene might be associated with depression in a human population and that alteration in CB2 gene expression may be involved in the effects of abused substances including opiates, cocaine and ethanol in rodents. Here we demonstrate that a high incidence of (Q63R) but not (H316Y) polymorphism in the CB2 gene was found in Japanese depressed subjects. CB2-Rs and their gene transcripts are expressed in the brains of naïve mice and are modulated following exposure to stressors and administration of abused drugs. Mice that developed alcohol preference had reduced CB2 gene expression and chronic treatment with JWH015 a putative CB2-R agonist, enhanced alcohol consumption in stressed but not in control mice. The direct intracerebroventricular microinjection of CB2 anti-sense oligonucleotide into the mouse brain reduced mouse aversions in the plus-maze test, indicating the functional presence of CB2-Rs in the brain that modifies behavior. We report for the using electron microscopy the sub cellular localization of CB2-Rs that are mainly on post-synaptic elements in rodent brain. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our data demonstrate the functional expression of CB2-Rs in brain that may provide novel targets for the effects of cannabinoids in depression and substance abuse disorders beyond neuro-immunocannabinoid activity. Public Library of Science 2008-02-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2241668/ /pubmed/18286196 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001640 Text en Onaivi et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Onaivi, Emmanuel S.
Ishiguro, Hiroki
Gong, Jian-Ping
Patel, Sejal
Meozzi, Paul A.
Myers, Lester
Perchuk, Alex
Mora, Zoila
Tagliaferro, Patricia A.
Gardner, Eileen
Brusco, Alicia
Akinshola, B. Emmanuel
Hope, Bruce
Lujilde, Javier
Inada, Toshiya
Iwasaki, Shinya
Macharia, David
Teasenfitz, Lindsey
Arinami, Tadao
Uhl, George R.
Brain Neuronal CB2 Cannabinoid Receptors in Drug Abuse and Depression: From Mice to Human Subjects
title Brain Neuronal CB2 Cannabinoid Receptors in Drug Abuse and Depression: From Mice to Human Subjects
title_full Brain Neuronal CB2 Cannabinoid Receptors in Drug Abuse and Depression: From Mice to Human Subjects
title_fullStr Brain Neuronal CB2 Cannabinoid Receptors in Drug Abuse and Depression: From Mice to Human Subjects
title_full_unstemmed Brain Neuronal CB2 Cannabinoid Receptors in Drug Abuse and Depression: From Mice to Human Subjects
title_short Brain Neuronal CB2 Cannabinoid Receptors in Drug Abuse and Depression: From Mice to Human Subjects
title_sort brain neuronal cb2 cannabinoid receptors in drug abuse and depression: from mice to human subjects
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2241668/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18286196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001640
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