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Reduction of Morphine Abstinence in Mice with a Mutation in the Gene Encoding CREB
296
Citations
14
References
1996
Year
Cyclic AdenosineGeneticsChronic Morphine AdministrationAddiction MedicineHealth SciencesMolecular NeuroscienceBehavioural PharmacologyBehavioral PharmacologyNeuropharmacologyGene Encoding CrebMorphine WithdrawalPharmacologyMorphine AbstinenceSignal TransductionAddictionPhysiologyNeuropeptide ReceptorNeuroscienceMedicineOpioid Use DisorderNeuropeptides
Chronic morphine administration induces an up-regulation of several components of the cyclic adenosine 5'-monophosphate (cAMP) signal transduction cascade. The behavioral and biochemical consequences of opiate withdrawal were investigated in mice with a genetic disruption of the alpha and Delta isoforms of the cAMP-responsive element-binding protein (CREB). In CREBalphadelta mutant mice the main symptoms of morphine withdrawal were strongly attenuated. No change in opioid binding sites or in morphine-induced analgesia was observed in these mutant mice, and the increase of adenylyl cyclase activity and immediate early gene expression after morphine withdrawal was normal. Thus, CREB-dependent gene transcription is a factor in the onset of behavioral manifestations of opiate dependence.
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