Nicotine withdrawal might take over your
body, but it doesn't take over your brain. The symptoms of nicotine
withdrawal are driven by a very specific group of neurons within a very
specific brain region, according to a report in Current Biology,
a Cell Press publication. Although caution is warranted, the
researchers say, the findings in mice suggest that therapies directed at
this group of neurons might one day help people quit smoking.Gauloises cigarettes.
"We were surprised to find that one population of neurons within a
single brain region could actually control physical nicotine withdrawal
behaviors," says Andrew Tapper of the Brudnick Neuropsychiatric Research
Institute at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.
Tapper and his colleagues first obtained mice addicted to nicotine by
delivering the drug to mice in their water for a period of 6 weeks. Then
they took the nicotine away. The mice started scratching and shaking in
the way a dog does when it is wet. Close examination of the animals'
brains revealed abnormally increased activity in neurons within a single
region known as the interpeduncular nucleus.Esse cigarettes.
When the researchers artificially activated those neurons with light,
animals showed behaviors that looked like nicotine withdrawal, whether
they had been exposed to the drug or not. The reverse was also true:
treatments that lowered activity in those neurons alleviated nicotine
withdrawal symptoms.
That the interpeduncular nucleus might play such a role in withdrawal
from nicotine makes sense because the region receives connections from
other areas of the brain involved in nicotine use and response, as well
as feelings of anxiety.
The interpeduncular nucleus is also densely packed with nicotinic
acetylcholine receptors that are the molecular targets of nicotine.
It is much less clear whether the findings related to nicotine will be relevant to other forms of addiction, but there are some hints that they may.
"Smoking is highly prevalent in people with other substance-use
disorders, suggesting a potential interaction between nicotine and other
drugs of abuse," Tapper says. "In addition, naturally occurring
mutations in genes encoding the nicotinic receptor subunits that are
found in the interpeduncular nucleus have been associated with drug and
alcohol dependence."
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