15 February 2006

Making the World Safe for Drugs Again


If the brain teaches itself to become addicted to a drug such as cocaine, is it possible the brain could "unlearn" the addiction?


In experiments with rat brain slices, the researchers demonstrated that orexin A does increase activity of neurons in the VTA associated with such plasticity.

And in experiments with whole animals, the researchers found that orexin A was required for "behavioral sensitization" to cocaine. This sensitization shows itself as a long-lasting increase in activity by the animals when they receive the drug and is an indicator that the animals are experiencing an increased craving for the drug.

Importantly, when the researchers "microinjected" directly into the VTA region of animals a drug that blocks orexin receptors, they found they could block the development of behavioral sensitization.

"The findings presented here establish a potential mechanism for the role of orexin signaling in plasticity related to addiction," concluded the researchers. The researchers wrote that this orexin-induced plasticity in the VTA "is likely an important substrate of behaviors relevant to addiction, as we show that activation of [orexin] receptors in the VTA is necessary for the development of cocaine-mediated behavioral sensitization. Thus, orexin receptors may provide novel pharmacotherapeutic targets for motivational disorders such as addiction.


Orexins are appetite stimulating peptide hormones secreted by the hypothalamus. But the orexins probably have more important functions than appetite stimulation:

Central administration of orexin A/hypocretin-1 strongly promotes wakefulness, increases body temperature, locomotion and elicits a strong increase in energy expenditure. Sleep deprivation also increases orexin A/hypocretin-1 transmission. The orexin/hypocretin system may thus be more important in the regulation of energy expenditure than food intake.

The association of orexins with plasticity of addiction-related neurons is yet another puzzle to tease out.

If anyone could casually use short acting drugs for amusement, without the worry of addiction, how would that affect society? What about addictions to sex, video games, and the internet? Stay tuned.

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