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Article Dans Une Revue Addiction Biology Année : 2012

Protracted abstinence from distinct drugs of abuse shows regulation of a common gene network

Résumé

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.

Dates et versions

hal-02650740 , version 1 (29-05-2020)

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Citer

Julie Le Merrer, Katia Befort, Olivier Gardon, Dominique Filliol, Emmanuel Darcq, et al.. Protracted abstinence from distinct drugs of abuse shows regulation of a common gene network. Addiction Biology, 2012, 17 (1), pp.1-12. ⟨10.1111/j.1369-1600.2011.00365.x⟩. ⟨hal-02650740⟩
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