| Literature DB >> 19096514 |
F A Moreira1, D C Aguiar, A C Campos, S F Lisboa, A L Terzian, L B Resstel, F S Guimarães.
Abstract
Cannabinoids play an important role in activity-dependent changes in synaptic activity and can interfere in several brain functions, including responses to aversive stimuli. The regions responsible for their effects, however, are still unclear. Cannabinoid type 1 (CB1) receptors are widely distributed in the central nervous system and are present in the periaqueductal gray (PAG), a midbrain structure closely involved in responses related to aversive states. Accordingly, exposure to stressful stimuli increases endocannabinoid (eCB) levels in the PAG, and local administration of CB1 agonists or drugs that facilitate eCB-mediated neurotransmission produces antinociceptive and antiaversive effects. To investigate if these drugs would also interfere in animal models that are sensitive to anxiolytic drugs, we verified the responses to intra-PAG injection of CB1 agonists in rats submitted to the elevated plus-maze, the Vogel punished licking test, or contextual aversive conditioning model. The drugs induced anxiolytic-like effects in all tests. The same was observed with the transient receptor potential vanilloid type 1 (TRPV1) antagonist capsazepine and with cannabidiol, a nonpsychotomimetic phytocannabinoid that produces anxiolytic-like effects after systemic administration in humans and laboratory animals. These results, therefore, suggest that the PAG could be an important site for the antiaversive effects of cannabinoids.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19096514 PMCID: PMC2593468 DOI: 10.1155/2009/625469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Effects of cannabinoids and drugs that interfere with the endocannabinoid system in animal models predictive of anxiolytic- or anxiogenic-like activity. (AEA: AEA; Δ9-THC: Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol; CBD: cannabidiol; EPM: elevated plus-maze; EXM: elevated X-maze; EZM: elevated zero-maze; VCT: Vogel conflict test; FC: fear conditioning; DLT: dark-light test; SI: social; NSF: novelty-suppressed feeding interaction.)
| Drug | Test | Dose (species) | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anxiolytic-like effects | Anxiogenic-like effects | |||
| Phytocannabinoids | ||||
|
| ||||
| Δ9-THC | EPM | 10–20 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | |
| EPM | 1–10 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| DLT | 0.3 mg/kg (mouse) | 0.5 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | |
| DLT | 0.3 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
| EPM | 1–10 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
| EPM | 0.075–0.75 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| EPM | 0.5–2.5 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| DLT | 1.25–2.5 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| EPM | 0.075–1.5; 3* mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
|
| ||||
| CBD | EPM | 1–10 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | |
| EPM | 2.5–10; 20* mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| EPM | 5 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| VCT | 10 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| FC | 10 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
|
| ||||
| CB1 agonists | ||||
|
| ||||
| HU210 | EXM | 25 | [ | |
| NSF | 100 | [ | ||
| EPM | 10 | 50 | [ | |
|
| ||||
| WIN-55212 | EPM | 1–3 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | |
| EPM | 1–3; 10* mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
| EPM | 1–3 mg/kg (mouse) | 1–3 mg/kg (rat) | [ | |
|
| ||||
| CP55940 | EPM | 75–125 | [ | |
| EPM | 75 | [ | ||
| EPM | 1 | 50 | [ | |
| EPM | 2.5–5 | 40 | [ | |
| SI | 40 | [ | ||
| EPM | 0.1–0.3 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
|
| ||||
| AEA | EPM | 10 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | |
| DLT | 0.3 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
|
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| AEA uptake inhibitor | ||||
|
| ||||
| AM404 | EPM | 5 mg/kg (rat) | [ | |
| EPM | 1–3; 10* mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
| EPM | 0.75–1.25 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
|
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| AEA metabolism inhibitors | ||||
|
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| URB597 | EZM | 0.1 mg/kg (rat) | [ | |
| EPM | 0.1–0.3 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
| EPM | 0.1 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
| DLT | 0.1–0.3 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| EPM | 1 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
|
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| AACOCF3 | DLT | 4 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | |
|
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| CB1 antagonists | ||||
|
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| Rimonabant | EPM | 3 mg/kg (rat) | [ | |
| EPM | 3 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| EPM | 3 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
| VCT | 0.3–3 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| EPM | 10 mg/kg (rat) | [ | ||
| EPM | 3–10 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
|
| ||||
| AM251 | EPM | 3 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | |
| EPM | 1.3–3 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
| EPM | 3–10 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
| EPM | 1–3 mg/kg (mouse) | [ | ||
|
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| TRPV1 agonists | ||||
|
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| Olvanil | EPM | 5 mg/kg (rat) | [ | |
|
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| TRPV1 antagonists | ||||
|
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| Capzasepine | EPM | 1–10 | [ | |
*Bell-shaped dose-response curve.
Effects of Cannabinoid-related drugs injected into the PAG of rats submitted to animal models of anxiety-related behaviors. (AEA: anandamide; ACEA: arachidonyl-2-chloro-ethylamide; CBD: cannabidiol; EPM: elevated plus-maze; VCT: Vogel conflict test; CFC: contextual fear conditioning; dlPAG: dorsolateral PAG; dPAG: dorsal (dorsolateral + dorsomedial) PAG; dmPAG: dorsomedial PAG; unpub: unpublished data.)
| Drug | PAG column | Test | Doses tested | Effect (effective dose) | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phytocannabinoids | CBD | dlPAG | EPM, VCT | 15–60 nmol | Anxiolytic (30 nmol*) | [ |
|
| ||||||
| Endocannabinoids | AEA | dlPAG | EPM | 0.05–50 pmol | Anxiolytic (5 pmol*,1) | [ |
| VCT | 5 pmol | Anxiolytic | [ | |||
| CFC | 5 pmol | Anxiolytic | [ | |||
|
| ||||||
| CB1 receptor agonists | ACEA | dlPAG | EPM | 0.05–5 pmol | Anxiolytic (0.05 pmol*) | [ |
| HU210 | dPAG | dPAG chemical stimulation | 0.1–5 | Attenuated flight
responses (0.1–5 | [ | |
| HU210 | dmPAG | Ultrasound-induced hyperlocomotion and freezing | 5 | Decreased hyperlocomotion, but increased freezing** | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| CB1 receptor antagonist | AM251 | dlPAG | EPM, VCT, CFC | 1–300 pmol | No effect by itself, but blocked AEA and AM404 anxiolytic effects | [ |
| Rimonabant | dPAG | Ultrasom-induced hyperlocomotion and freezing | 30 | No effect by itself | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| AEA uptake inhibitor | AM404 | dlPAG | EPM | 0.5–50 pmol | No effect by itself; potentiated the anxiolytic effect of AEA | [ |
| VCT | 50 pmol | Anxiolytic | [ | |||
| CFC | 50 pmol | Anxiolytic | [ | |||
|
| ||||||
| AEA metabolism inhibitor | URB597 | dlPAG | VCT | 0.01–0.1 nmol | Anxiolytic (0.01 pmol*) | [ |
|
| ||||||
| TRPV1 antagonists | Capsazepine | dlPAG | EPM, VCT | 10–60 nmol | Anxiolytic (60 nmol)+ | [ |
*Bell-shaped dose-response curve. Anxiolytic effect blocked by AM251 (100 pmol) and potentiated by AM404 (50 pmol).
+Capsazepine 10 nmol turned the higher, ineffective dose of CBD (60 nmol) into an anxiolytic one in the EPM [85].
**Not blocked by rimonabant 30 μg.
Figure 1Possible effects of cannabinoids in the dlPAG. Glutamatergic inputs from forebrain structures such as the dorsomedial part of the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (dmVMH) and dorsal premammilary hypothalamic nucleus (PmD) activate a local neural substrate that mediates defensive responses [88]. This substrate is under GABAergic and serotonergic inhibitory influence [26]. Activation of CB1 receptors by cannabinoids such as AEA interferes with presynaptic glutamate (Glu) and GABA (Ga) neurotransmitter release. CB1-mediated decrease of glutamate release would promote anxiolytic-like effects. Activation of TRPV1 presynaptic receptors, on the other hand, would produce opposite effects. The anxiolytic effects of cannabidiol (CBD), a nonpsychotomimetic cannabinoid, in the dlPAG are not mediated by CB1 receptors, but probably involve activation of postsynaptic 5HT1A receptors. The bell-shaped dose-response curves observed with AEA and CBD may depend on activation of TRPV1 receptors. Regarding AEA, a presynaptic decrease of GABA release could also be related to this effect.