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neurophysiology of nicotine withdrawal

dingleberries

Bluelighter
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Apr 24, 2001
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melbourne,australia
OK, kind of a general question. What is actually going on when one is experiencing nicotine withdrawal? Is it simply higher activity in the reward pathway, i.e. VTA, nucleus accumbens, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex etc? What aspects of nictotine withdrawal differentiates it from withdrawal from other substances?
 
What differentiates it? The fact that it's caused by subsensitivity in particular nicotinic receptors? Whats happening? Areas which are usually excited by whatever it is (alpha4beta2?) nicotoninc receptors are underactive, coupled with the compulsion to use tobacco caused by the inappropriate synaptic pathways facilitated by nicotine.
 
^ I'm assuming... Just like withdrawing from any other stimulant drug
 
Yup, I'd think so[1]. How much that causes withdrawals is pretty unknown, but I doubt it has much to do with
 
Nicotine's main action is on nicotonic acetylcholine receptors. Nicotinic receptors are expressed on dopaminergic neurons, and nicotoninc receptors are excitatory... i.e. nicotine excited dopaminergic neurons...

Of course, it has lots of other actions, as does endogenous acetylcholine
 
Thought this fits in here:
Nature. 2005 Jul 7;436(7047):103-7.

Nicotine reinforcement and cognition restored by targeted expression of nicotinic receptors.

Maskos U, Molles BE, Pons S, Besson M, Guiard BP, Guilloux JP, Evrard A, Cazala P, Cormier A, Mameli-Engvall M, Dufour N, Cloez-Tayarani I, Bemelmans AP, Mallet J, Gardier AM, David V, Faure P, Granon S, Changeux JP.

Unite Recepteurs et Cognition, CNRS URA 2182, Institut Pasteur, 25 rue du Dr Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France.

Worldwide, 100 million people are expected to die this century from the consequences of nicotine addiction, but nicotine is also known to enhance cognitive performance. Identifying the molecular mechanisms involved in nicotine reinforcement and cognition is a priority and requires the development of new in vivo experimental paradigms. The ventral tegmental area (VTA) of the midbrain is thought to mediate the reinforcement properties of many drugs of abuse. Here we specifically re-expressed the beta2-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) by stereotaxically injecting a lentiviral vector into the VTA of mice carrying beta2-subunit deletions. We demonstrate the efficient re-expression of electrophysiologically responsive, ligand-binding nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in dopamine-containing neurons of the VTA, together with the recovery of nicotine-elicited dopamine release and nicotine self-administration. We also quantified exploratory behaviours of the mice, and showed that beta2-subunit re-expression restored slow exploratory behaviour (a measure of cognitive function) to wild-type levels, but did not affect fast navigation behaviour. We thus demonstrate the sufficient role of the VTA in both nicotine reinforcement and endogenous cholinergic regulation of cognitive functions.

PMID: 16001069
 
I was reading that abstract and was like "Fuck, that's pretty hard out, I'm surprised thats only in neuropsychopharmacology or Neuropharmacology or any of the other partially lame journals you have been citing... but yeah, nature... that makes sense.

That's quite a good study, though I'm curious about their controls... what kinda of effect did a null virus have?
 
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