| Literature DB >> 27303265 |
Menahem B Doura1, Ellen M Unterwald1.
Abstract
Exposure to stress increases vulnerability to drug abuse, as well as relapse liability in addicted individuals. Chronic drug use alters stress response in a manner that increases drug seeking behaviors and relapse. Drug exposure and withdrawal have been shown to alter stress responses, and corticosteroid mediators of stress have been shown to impact addiction-related brain function and drug-seeking behavior. Despite the documented interplay between stress and substance abuse, the mechanisms by which stress exposure and drug seeking interact remain largely unknown. Recent studies indicate that microRNAs (miRNA) play a significant role in stress modulation as well as addiction-related processes including neurogenesis, synapse development, plasticity, drug acquisition, withdrawal and relapse. MiRNAs are short non-coding RNAs that function as bidirectional epigenetic modulators of gene expression through imperfect sequence targeted degradation and/or translational repression of mRNAs. They serve as dynamic regulators of CNS physiology and pathophysiology, and facilitate rapid and long-lasting changes to complex systems and behaviors. MiRNAs function in glucocorticoid signaling and the mesolimbic dopamine reward system, as well as mood disorders related to drug withdrawal. The literature suggests miRNAs play a pivotal role in the interaction between exposures to stress, addiction-related processes, and negative affective states resulting from extended drug withdrawal. This manuscript reviews recent evidence for the role of miRNAs in the modulation of stress and cocaine responses, and discusses potential mediation of the interaction of these systems by miRNAs. Uncovering the mechanism behind the association of stress and drug taking has the potential to impact the treatment of drug abuse and prevention of relapse. Further comprehension of these complex interactions may provide promising new targets for the treatment of drug addiction.Entities:
Keywords: brain-derived neurotrophic factor; cocaine; corticotropin-releasing factor; extended amygdala; microRNA; stress
Year: 2016 PMID: 27303265 PMCID: PMC4880569 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2016.00125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Behavioral effects and molecular targets/regulators of microRNA(miRNAs) expression.
| miR | Expression effects | Targets/regulators |
|---|---|---|
| miR-181a | Overexpression increases cocaine CPP (Chandrasekar and Dreyer, | BDNF, SIRT1, GluA2 (Rivetti di Val Cervo et al., |
| miR-124/124a | Overexpression attenuates cocaine CPP (Chandrasekar and Dreyer, | Mineralocorticoid receptor, BDNF, CREB (Chandrasekar and Dreyer, |
| miR-134 | Modulates cocaine plasticity (Gao et al., | CREB, BDNF, SIRT1 (Gao et al., |
| miR-135a | Overexpression attenuates social defeat stress (Issler et al., | Mineralocorticoid receptor, serotonin transporter and receptor 1a (Sõber et al., |
| miR-375 | BDNF, MAP3K8, POMC, CRF (Abdelmohsen et al., | |
| miR-212 | Overexpression decreases cocaine self-administration Down-regulation increases cocaine self-administration (Hollander et al., | BDNF, CREB:TORC, MeCP2 (Hollander et al., |
| miR-183 | mTor (Kye et al., | |
| miR-9 | BDNF, CREB, SIRT1 (Wu and Xie, | |
| miR-26a/26b | BDNF, CREB (Caputo et al., | |
| miR-449a | Overexpression decreases CRF-R1 expression Down-regulation attenuates CRF-R1 downregulation (Nemoto et al., | POMC, CRF-R1 (Nemoto et al., |
| miR-132 | BDNF, CREB, glucocorticoids, ERK, SIRT1, glutamate receptor (Strum et al., | |
| Let7 | Modulates cocaine plasticity (Chandrasekar and Dreyer, | SIRT1 (Helwak et al., |
| miR-34c | Overexpression decreases anxiety-like behavior (Haramati et al., | |
| miR-19b | Androgenic receptor B1, PTEN (Olive et al., |
Figure 1Regulation of cocaine reward and stress by microRNAs (miRNAs). Chronic cocaine exposure has been shown to alter expression of a number of miRNAs in various regions of the brain resulting in altered expression of down-stream molecular targets (Chandrasekar and Dreyer, 2009)1, (Chen et al., 2013)3, (Eipper-Mains et al., 2011)4, (Hollander et al., 2010)6, (Jonkman and Kenny, 2013)7. This in turn effects responding in the stress and reward systems of the brain. Exposure to stress regulates expression of miRNAs, and exogenous alteration of expression of several miRNAs regulated by cocaine and stress exposure alters the rewarding effects of cocaine. Alteration of miRNA expression in the stress and reward systems together modulate cocaine intake in a feed-back regulatory loop (Chandrasekar and Dreyer, 2011)2, (Haramati et al., 2011)5, (Hollander et al., 2010)6, (Mannironi et al., 2013)8, (Meerson et al., 2010)9, (Nemoto et al., 2012)10, (Rinaldi et al., 2010)11, (Shimizu et al., 2015)12, (Volk et al., 2014)13, (Yi et al., 2014)14, (Zhang et al., 2015)15.
Figure 2Brain region specific regulation of micrRNA expression by stress and cocaine. Regulation of microRNA expression by stress (red) and cocaine (blue) occurs in a region specific manner. Stress and cocaine exposure alters microRNA expression in brain regions involved in stress (amygdala), reward (striatum), and learning and memory (hippocampus and frontal cortex).