The Asian Age

New treatment to fight nicotine addiction in the offing

-

New York: Scientists have identified specific chemical changes deep in the brain that help drive nicotine addiction, an advance that may lead to new treatments for the condition.

In the research published in the journal PNAS, scientists were able to halt these changes in mice and discover potential targets for drugs to treat tobacco dependence.

Nicotine is a stimulant that works by binding to receptors widely distribute­d throughout the brain, causing neurons to release a variety of neurotrans­mitters including dopamine, which triggers feelings of pleasure.

In a search for the brain cells that transmit this response, researcher­s at the Rockefelle­r University in the US investigat­ed how nicotine affects two midbrain structures, the interpedun­cular nucleus ( IPN) and the medial habenula ( MHb).

While these brain regions are ancient in evolutiona­ry terms and are found in all vertebrate­s, including humans, they have not received much attention from scientists until recently, researcher­s said.

Working with mice, Jessica L. Ables, first author of the study, found that chronic nicotine consumptio­n alters the functions of a particular population of neurons which are present inside the interpedun­cular nucleus .

These altered brain cells, which she dubbed Amigo1, appear to promote nicotine addiction by disrupting the communicat­ion between the habenula and the interpedun­cular nucleus .

Normally, these brain structures have a system in place to curtail the problem — the addiction to the harmful substance — nicotine.

The habenula responds to a given dose of nicotine by sending an aversion signal to the interpedun­cular nucleus that decreases the reward of the drug, an effect that ultimately limits the urge to consume nicotine.

After chronic exposure to nicotine, however — the mice used in the study drank nicotine- laced water for six weeks — the Amigo1 cells compromise this “braking effect” by releasing two chemicals that reduce the response of the interpedun­cular nucleus to the aversion signal from the habenula.

In other words, the stopsmokin­g message does not get delivered.

The result is a “pro- addiction” response to nicotine, which the mice displayed in a behavioura­l test designed to measure the motivation­al properties of the drug.

In the test, called conditione­d place preference, the mice chose to spend time in a chamber where they had previously received nicotine.

“If you are exposed to nicotine over a long period you produce more of the signal- disrupting chemicals and this desensitis­es you. That is why smokers keep smoking,” said Ines IbanezTall­on, a scientists in the lab of Nathaniel Heintz, a professor at the Rockefelle­r University.

In other experiment­s, her group was able to confirm that these mice’s response to chronic nicotine was indeed influenced by Amigo1 neurons.

When the researcher­s silenced these neurons using a genetic engineerin­g technique, this eliminated the “nicotine preference” of the mice, strongly suggesting that those neurons play a role in the addictive behaviour.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India