Publication | Closed Access
Protracted abstinence from distinct drugs of abuse shows regulation of a common gene network
52
Citations
66
References
2011
Year
Substance UseBehavioral AddictionAbstract AddictionGeneticsTranscriptional RegulationsDrug TreatmentEpigeneticsSocial SciencesSexual AddictionPsychoactive Substance UseAddiction GeneticsCommon Gene NetworkPsychiatryBehavioral NeuroscienceBehavioral PharmacologyAbuse Shows RegulationNeuropharmacologyAddiction PsychologySubstance AbuseAddictionChronic MorphineNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatrySubstance AddictionSystems BiologyMedicineDistinct Drugs
ABSTRACT Addiction is a chronic brain disorder. Prolonged abstinence from drugs of abuse involves dysphoria, high stress responsiveness and craving. The neurobiology of drug abstinence, however, is poorly understood. We previously identified a unique set of hundred mu‐opioid receptor‐dependent genes in the extended amygdala, a key site for hedonic and stress processing in the brain. Here we examined these candidate genes either immediately after chronic morphine, nicotine, Δ9‐tetrahydrocannabinol or alcohol, or following 4 weeks of abstinence. Regulation patterns strongly differed among chronic groups. In contrast, gene regulations strikingly converged in the abstinent groups and revealed unforeseen common adaptations within a novel huntingtin‐centered molecular network previously unreported in addiction research. This study demonstrates that, regardless the drug, a specific set of transcriptional regulations develops in the abstinent brain, which possibly contributes to the negative affect characterizing protracted abstinence. This transcriptional signature may represent a hallmark of drug abstinence and a unitary adaptive molecular mechanism in substance abuse disorders.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1