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首页> 外文期刊>Biological psychiatry >Extracellular Signal-Regulated Protein Kinases 1 and 2 Activation by Addictive Drugs: A Signal Toward Pathological Adaptation
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Extracellular Signal-Regulated Protein Kinases 1 and 2 Activation by Addictive Drugs: A Signal Toward Pathological Adaptation

机译:上瘾药物的细胞外信号调节蛋白激酶1和2激活:信号向病理适应。

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Addiction is a chronic and relapsing psychiatric disorder that is thought to occur in vulnerable individuals. Synaptic plasticity evoked by drugs of abuse in the so-called neuronal circuits of reward has been proposed to underlie behavioral adaptations that characterize addiction. By increasing dopamine in the striatum, addictive drugs alter the balance of dopamine and glutamate signals converging onto striatal medium-sized spiny neurons (MSNs) and activate intracellular events involved in long-term behavioral alterations. Our laboratory contributed to the identification of salient molecular changes induced by administration of addictive drugs to rodents. We pioneered the observation that a common feature of addictive drugs is to activate, by a double tyrosine/threonine phosphorylation, the extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 (ERK1/2) in the striatum, which control a plethora of substrates, some of them being critically involved in cocaine-mediated molecular and behavioral adaptations. Herein, we review how the interplay between dopamine and glutamate signaling controls cocaine-induced ERK1/2 activation in MSNs. We emphasize the key role of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor potentiation by D1 receptor to trigger ERK1/2 activation and its subsequent nuclear translocation where it modulates both epigenetic and genetic processes engaged by cocaine. We discuss how cocaine-induced long-term synaptic and structural plasticity of MSNs, as well as behavioral adaptations, are influenced by ERK1/2-controlled targets. We conclude that a better knowledge of molecular mechanisms underlying ERK1/2 activation by drugs of abuse and/or its role in long-term neuronal plasticity in the striatum may provide a new route for therapeutic treatment in addiction.
机译:成瘾是一种慢性和复发性精神病,据认为发生在脆弱的个体中。有人提出,滥用药物在所谓的奖励神经元回路中引起的突触可塑性可作为成瘾行为适应的基础。通过增加纹状体中的多巴胺,成瘾性药物会改变多巴胺和谷氨酸信号的平衡,收敛到纹状体中等大小的棘突神经元(MSN)上,并激活涉及长期行为改变的细胞内事件。我们的实验室有助于识别由对啮齿类动物上瘾的药物引起的显着分子变化。我们开创了一种观察,即成瘾药物的共同特征是通过双重酪氨酸/苏氨酸磷酸化来激活纹状体中的细胞外信号调节激酶1和2(ERK1 / 2),该激酶控制过多的底物,其中一些他们严重参与可卡因介导的分子和行为适应。在这里,我们审查了多巴胺和谷氨酸信号之间的相互作用如何控制可卡因诱导的MSNs中的ERK1 / 2激活。我们强调由D1受体引起的N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸受体增强在触发ERK1 / 2激活及其随后的核易位(在此过程中可卡因参与的表观遗传和遗传过程的调控)的关键作用。我们讨论了可卡因诱导的MSN的长期突触和结构可塑性以及行为适应如何受到ERK1 / 2控制的目标的影响。我们得出结论,对滥用药物激活ERK1 / 2激活的分子机制和/或其在纹状体中长期神经元可塑性中的作用的更好了解可能为成瘾性治疗提供新途径。

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