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IN THE NEWS
For your information
Report: Key to
nicotine addiction found
Researchers isolated single molecule they think to blame
Thursday, November 4, 2004
WASHINGTON (AP) -- California researchers fiddled with a single gene
to create mice hypersensitive to nicotine, pointing to a single
molecule partly to blame for nicotine's addictive allure.
The genetically engineered
mice were tripped up by the tiniest exposure to nicotine -- 50 times
less than the level of nicotine coursing through a typical smoker's
blood. Once hooked, the mice experienced classic signs of nicotine
dependence that keep smokers puffing, the research team reports
Friday in the journal Science.
"Dependence-related behaviors,
including reward, tolerance, and sensitization, occur strongly and
at remarkably low nicotine doses" in the mice, the research team
wrote.
In humans, reward arrives as a
pleasant little jolt of dopamine, a calming brain chemical unleashed
by nicotine. The body's tolerance for the drug leads to more
smoking.
Sensitization means not
feeling good without a nicotine fix, said Henry Lester, a biology
professor at the California Institute of Technology who was among
the paper's 10 authors. In mice, researchers saw evidence of a
reward when mice chose nicotine hits over salt, changed body
temperatures as an indication of tolerance and more running around
among sensitized mice.
Other researchers praised the
study.
The findings "not only provide
direct evidence of how nicotine promotes dependence, but also raise
fundamental questions about the genetics of addiction," researchers
at the Centre Medical Universitaire, in Geneva, Switzerland, wrote
in a companion piece.
More than 4 million people
around the globe die from smoking-related causes each year.
If the findings in mice hold
true for humans, the work points to a specific target for a new drug
to attack, easing the physical and behavioral toll of nicotine
addiction, others suggest.
People become dependent on
nicotine when it parks in nerve cell receptors designed for the
chemical acetylcholine. Once nicotine fills that space, dopamine is
released. By knowing the specific parking place where nicotine can
exact a high toll, a drug could be fashioned to fill it.
"The power lies in the ability
to be so specific. In being so specific, you can treat the cause
without the ramifications of the side effects," said Stephen L.
Dewey, a Brookhaven National Laboratory scientist who has studied
epilepsy drugs to treat nicotine addiction.
Daniel McGehee, a University
of Chicago neurobiologist who has studied a different subset of
receptors sensitive to nicotine called it "a fantastic study" but
cautioned against thinking a drug would deliver benefits without
costs.
Interfering with how the body
experiences the rewards of nicotine could dull such experiences as
eating food or drinking water.
"That pathway is not there to
promote tobacco use. It's there to promote healthy behaviors that
lead to the survival of our species," McGehee said. Tampering with
it "may interfere with our ability to find pleasure and joy in
normal, healthy things."
Lester has been working for
years on alpha4, one of a dozen known subunits of nicotine receptor
sites. The team learned how to tweak that protein, making it much
more sensitive to nicotine.
What wasn't clear was which
mice to manipulate.
Others found answers by
subtraction, erasing genes to create knock-out mice to study
nicotine addiction. Lester's group made "knock-in" mice, making a
single amino acid change among the millions of choices present in
30,000 mice genes.
"This is extremely clever
because you're looking at it by addition," said Dr. L.W. Role, a
Columbia University Medical Center professor who studies receptors
sensitive to nicotine.
In the first set of mice, the
genetic mutation was too pronounced. After the nicotine hits,
dopamine levels were so intense the mice died, Lester said.
In the Science paper, they
made tweaks that were just right.
"What we have done is to show
that a particular molecule is not only necessary for nicotine
addiction, but is sufficient for nicotine addiction," he said. "When
the particular alpha receptor is activated by nicotine -- and no
other receptors -- that is sufficient to produce some of the effects
associated with addiction."
Because of that, the knock-in
mice are nicotine addicted without complicating side effects. "We
can now go on this molecular detective hunt" Lester said, looking
for other molecules changed by nicotine dependence.
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