Departments of Psychiatry, Neuroscience, Pharmacology and Systems Therapeutics, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York.
Section of Psychiatry, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Biol Psychiatry. 2011 Oct 15;70(8):763-769. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2011.06.027. Epub 2011 Aug 5.
Prenatal cannabis exposure has been linked to addiction vulnerability, but the neurobiology underlying this risk is unknown.
Striatal dopamine and opioid-related genes were studied in human fetal subjects exposed to cannabis (as well as cigarettes and alcohol). Cannabis-related gene disturbances observed in the human fetus were subsequently characterized with an animal model of prenatal Δ-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) (.15 mg/kg) exposure.
Prenatal cannabis exposure decreased dopamine receptor D2 (DRD2) messenger RNA expression in the human ventral striatum (nucleus accumbens [NAc]), a key brain reward region. No significant alterations were observed for the other genes in cannabis-exposed subjects. Maternal cigarette use was associated with reduced NAc prodynorphin messenger RNA expression, and alcohol exposure induced broad alterations primarily in the dorsal striatum of most genes. To explore the mechanisms underlying the cannabis-associated disturbances, we exposed pregnant rats to THC and examined the epigenetic regulation of the NAc Drd2 gene in their offspring at postnatal day 2, comparable to the human fetal period studied, and in adulthood. Chromatin immunoprecipitation of the adult NAc revealed increased 2meH3K9 repressive mark and decreased 3meH3K4 and RNA polymerase II at the Drd2 gene locus in the THC-exposed offspring. Decreased Drd2 expression was accompanied by reduced dopamine D2 receptor (D(2)R) binding sites and increased sensitivity to opiate reward in adulthood.
These data suggest that maternal cannabis use alters developmental regulation of mesolimbic D(2)R in offspring through epigenetic mechanisms that regulate histone lysine methylation, and the ensuing reduction of D(2)R might contribute to addiction vulnerability later in life.
产前大麻暴露与成瘾易感性有关,但这种风险的神经生物学基础尚不清楚。
研究了暴露于大麻(以及香烟和酒精)的人类胎儿纹状体多巴胺和阿片类相关基因。随后,用产前 Δ-9-四氢大麻酚(THC)(0.15mg/kg)暴露的动物模型对人类胎儿中观察到的大麻相关基因紊乱进行了特征描述。
产前大麻暴露降低了人类腹侧纹状体(伏隔核[NAc])中多巴胺受体 D2(DRD2)信使 RNA 的表达,这是大脑奖励区域的关键部位。在暴露于大麻的受试者中,其他基因没有观察到显著变化。母亲吸烟与 NAc 前原啡肽信使 RNA 表达减少有关,而酒精暴露主要诱导大多数基因在背侧纹状体的广泛改变。为了探索与大麻相关的紊乱的潜在机制,我们使怀孕的大鼠接触 THC,并在出生后第 2 天(相当于研究的人类胎儿期)以及成年期检查其后代 NAc 中的 Drd2 基因的表观遗传调控。成年 NAc 的染色质免疫沉淀显示,在 THC 暴露的后代中,Drd2 基因座上的 2meH3K9 抑制性标记增加,而 3meH3K4 和 RNA 聚合酶 II 减少。Drd2 表达的减少伴随着多巴胺 D2 受体(D(2)R)结合位点的减少和成年期对阿片类奖赏的敏感性增加。
这些数据表明,母亲使用大麻通过调节组蛋白赖氨酸甲基化的表观遗传机制改变了后代中中脑边缘 D(2)R 的发育调控,而随后的 D(2)R 减少可能导致以后生活中的成瘾易感性。