| Literature DB >> 27932983 |
Regimantas Jurkus1, Harriet L L Day2, Francisco S Guimarães3, Jonathan L C Lee4, Leandro J Bertoglio5, Carl W Stevenson2.
Abstract
Anxiety and trauma-related disorders are psychiatric diseases with a lifetime prevalence of up to 25%. Phobias and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are characterized by abnormal and persistent memories of fear-related contexts and cues. The effects of psychological treatments such as exposure therapy are often only temporary and medications can be ineffective and have adverse side effects. Growing evidence from human and animal studies indicates that cannabidiol, the main non-psychotomimetic phytocannabinoid present in Cannabis sativa, alleviates anxiety in paradigms assessing innate fear. More recently, the effects of cannabidiol on learned fear have been investigated in preclinical studies with translational relevance for phobias and PTSD. Here we review the findings from these studies, with an emphasis on cannabidiol regulation of contextual fear. The evidence indicates that cannabidiol reduces learned fear in different ways: (1) cannabidiol decreases fear expression acutely, (2) cannabidiol disrupts memory reconsolidation, leading to sustained fear attenuation upon memory retrieval, and (3) cannabidiol enhances extinction, the psychological process by which exposure therapy inhibits learned fear. We also present novel data on cannabidiol regulation of learned fear related to explicit cues, which indicates that auditory fear expression is also reduced acutely by cannabidiol. We conclude by outlining future directions for research to elucidate the neural circuit, psychological, cellular, and molecular mechanisms underlying the regulation of fear memory processing by cannabidiol. This line of investigation may lead to the development of cannabidiol as a novel therapeutic approach for treating anxiety and trauma-related disorders such as phobias and PTSD in the future.Entities:
Keywords: cannabidiol; extinction; fear conditioning; reconsolidation
Year: 2016 PMID: 27932983 PMCID: PMC5121237 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2016.00454
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1(A) The chemical structure of CBD (National Center for Biotechnology Information, 2016). (B) The different phases of fear memory. In the hours after its acquisition fear memory undergoes consolidation. After a short duration of retrieval, fear memory can become destabilized, after which it undergoes reconsolidation to maintain or update the memory. With longer retrieval and/or repeated exposures extinction can occur, resulting in the acquisition and consolidation of a new extinction memory which competes with the original memory to inhibit fear expression. (C) A summary of the effects of acute CBD administration on different contextual fear memory processes. CBD reduces learned fear expression, disrupts fear memory reconsolidation, and facilitates fear extinction.
Summary of systemic CBD effects on contextual fear memory processing in male rats (Δ9-THC, Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol; BDNF, brain derived neurotrophic factor; CB1R, cannabinoid type1 receptor; ERK1/2, extracellular signal-regulated kinase1/2; i.p., intraperitoneal; PL, prelimbic; SHR, spontaneously hypertensive rat; TrkB, tyrosine receptor kinase B).
| Wistar | 10 mg/kg, i.p., pre-retrieval | Anxiolytic (↓ fear expression) | Not tested | Resstel et al., |
| Lister hooded | 10 mg/kg daily for 14 days, i.p., pre-acquisition and -retrieval | Anxiogenic (↑ fear expression) and/or potentiated fear conditioning | ↓ hippocampal BDNF and TrkB expression, ↓ frontal cortex phospho-ERK1/2 levels | ElBatsh et al., |
| Wistar and SHR | 1.0–15 mg/kg, i.p., pre-acquisition | Anxiolytic (↓ fear expression) and/or disrupted fear memory formation (in Wistar rats only) | Not tested | Levin et al., |
| Wistar | 3.0–30 mg/kg, i.p., post-retrieval | Disrupted memory reconsolidation (bell-shaped dose-response curve) | Indirect CB1R activation | Stern et al., |
| Wistar | 10 mg/kg, i.p., post-retrieval | Disrupted memory reconsolidation | Not tested | Gazarini et al., |
| Wistar | 10 mg/kg, i.p., post-retrieval | Disrupted memory reconsolidation | Indirect CB1R activation in PL | Stern et al., |
| Wistar | 1.0 mg/kg + Δ9-THC 0.1 mg/kg, i.p., post-retrieval | Disrupted memory reconsolidation | Not tested | Stern et al., |
| Lister hooded | 10 mg/kg, i.p., pre-extinction (after weak or strong fear conditioning) | Impaired extinction with weak fear conditioning and enhanced extinction with strong fear conditioning | Not tested | Song et al., this issue |
Summary of central CBD effects on contextual fear memory processing in male rats (5-HT.
| Wistar | 6.4 nmol, i.c.v., pre-retrieval | Facilitated fear extinction | Indirect CB1R activation | Bitencourt et al., |
| Wistar | 30 nmol, PL, pre-retrieval | Anxiolytic (↓ fear expression) | Not tested | Lemos et al., |
| Wistar | 30 nmol, IL, pre-retrieval | Anxiogenic (↑ fear expression) | Not tested | Lemos et al., |
| Wistar | 30–60 nmol, BNST, pre-retrieval | Anxiolytic (↓ fear expression) | 5-HT1AR activation | Gomes et al., |
| Long evans | 1.3 nmol, IL, pre-extinction | Facilitated fear extinction | Indirect CB1R activation | Do Monte et al., |
| Wistar | 30 nmol, PL, pre-retrieval | Anxiolytic (↓ fear expression) | 5-HT1AR activation | Fogaça et al., |
| Wistar | 30 nmol, IL, pre-retrieval | Anxiogenic (↑ fear expression) | 5-HT1AR activation | Marinho et al., |
Figure 2Cannabidiol reduces the expression of auditory and contextual fear memory in rats. (A) Schematic representation of the experimental procedures used; the arrow indicates that drug was injected 30 min before extinction. (B) Freezing during tone-shock pairings did not differ between the groups during auditory fear conditioning. (C) Rats treated with 20 mg/kg of cannabidiol showed significantly decreased freezing during tone presentations at the start of extinction, compared to rats given 5 mg/kg or vehicle (*P <0.05). (D) There were no differences in tone-induced freezing between the groups during extinction recall. (E) Rats treated with 5, 10, or 20 mg/kg of cannabidiol showed significantly decreased freezing in the 2 min period before tone presentations during extinction, compared to vehicle-treated controls (**P <0.01). (F) There were no differences in freezing between the groups in the 2 min period before tone presentations during extinction recall (see Supplementary Material for more details).