A cyclic AMP related gene network in microglia is inversely regulated by morphine tolerance and withdrawal
Biological Psychiatry Global Open Science
Coffey, K;Lesiak, A;Marx, R;Vo, E;Garden, G;Neumaier, J;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.bpsgos.2021.07.011
Background Microglia have recently been implicated in opioid dependence and withdrawal. Mu Opioid (MOR) receptors are expressed in microglia, and microglia form intimate connections with nearby neurons. Accordingly, opioids have both direct (MOR mediated) and indirect (neuron-interaction mediated) effects on microglia function. Methods To investigate this directly, we used RNA sequencing of ribosome-associated RNAs from striatal microglia (RiboTag-Seq) after the induction of morphine tolerance and followed by naloxone precipitated withdrawal (n=16). We validated the RNA-Seq data by combining fluorescent in-situ hybridization with immunohistochemistry for microglia (n=18). Finally, we expressed and activated the Gi/o-coupled hM4Di DREADD receptor in CX3CR1-expressing cells during morphine withdrawal (n=18). Results We detected large, inverse changes in RNA translation following opioid tolerance and withdrawal. WGCNA analysis revealed an intriguing network of cAMP-associated genes that are known to be involved in microglial motility, morphology, and interactions with neurons that were downregulated with morphine tolerance and upregulated rapidly by withdrawal. Three-dimensional histological reconstruction of microglia allowed for volumetric, visual colocalization of mRNA within individual microglia that validated our bioinformatics results. Direct activation of Gi/o-coupled DREADD receptors in CX3CR1-expressing cells exacerbated signs of opioid withdrawal rather than mimicking the effects of morphine. Conclusions These results indicate that Gi-signaling and cAMP-associated gene networks are inversely engaged during opioid tolerance and early withdrawal, perhaps revealing a role of microglia in mitigating the consequences of opioids.
Al-Hasani R, McCall JG, Shin G, Gomez AM, Schmitz GP, Bernardi JM, Pyo CO, Park SI, Marcinkiewcz CM, Crowley NA, Krashes MJ, Lowell BB, Kash TL, Rogers JA, Bruchas MR.
PMID: 26335648 | DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2015.08.019
The nucleus accumbens (NAc) and the dynorphinergic system are widely implicated in motivated behaviors. Prior studies have shown that activation of the dynorphin-kappa opioid receptor (KOR) system leads to aversive, dysphoria-like behavior. However, the endogenous sources of dynorphin in these circuits remain unknown. We investigated whether dynorphinergic neuronal firing in the NAc is sufficient to induce aversive behaviors. We found that photostimulation of dynorphinergic cells in the ventral NAc shell elicits robust conditioned and real-time aversive behavior via KOR activation, and in contrast, photostimulation of dorsal NAc shell dynorphin cells induced a KOR-mediated place preference and was positively reinforcing. These results show previously unknown discrete subregions of dynorphin-containing cells in the NAc shell that selectively drive opposing behaviors. Understanding the discrete regional specificity by which NAc dynorphinerigic cells regulate preference and aversion provides insight into motivated behaviors that are dysregulated in stress, reward, and psychiatric disease.
Human Type II Taste Cells Express ACE2 and are Infected by SARS-CoV-2
The American journal of pathology
Doyle, ME;Appleton, A;Liu, QR;Yao, Q;Mazucanti, CH;Egan, JM;
PMID: 34102107 | DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2021.05.010
Chemosensory changes are well-reported symptoms of SARS-CoV-2 infection. The virus targets cells for entry by binding of its spike protein to cell-surface angiotensin-converting enzyme- 2 (ACE2). It was not known whether ACE2 is expressed on taste receptor cells (TRCs) nor if TRCs are infected directly. Using an in-situ hybridization (ISH) probe and an antibody specific to ACE2, ACE2 is present on a subpopulation of TRCs, namely, Type II cells in taste buds in taste papillae. Fungiform papillae (FP) of a SARS-CoV-2+ patient exhibiting symptoms of COVID-19, including taste changes, were biopsied. Based on ISH, replicating SARS-CoV-2 was present in Type II cells. Therefore, taste Type II cells provide a potential portal for viral entry that predicts vulnerabilities to SARS-CoV-2 in the oral cavity. The continuity and cell turnover of the patient's FP taste stem cell layer were disrupted during infection and had not completely recovered 6 weeks post symptom onset. Another patient suffering post-COVID-19 taste disturbances also had disrupted stem cells. These results demonstrate the possibility that novel and sudden taste changes frequently reported in COVID-19 may be the result of direct infection of taste papillae by SARS-CoV-2. This may result in impaired taste receptor stem cell activity and suggest more work is needed to understand the acute and post-acute dynamics of viral kinetics in the human taste bud.
Robustelli Test, E;Sena, P;Locatelli, AG;Carugno, A;di Mercurio, M;Moggio, E;Gambini, DM;Arosio, MEG;Callegaro, A;Morotti, D;Gianatti, A;Vezzoli, P;
PMID: 34989043 | DOI: 10.1111/pde.14903
Since the beginning of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, an increasing number of chilblain-like lesions (ChLL) have been increasingly reported worldwide. To date, the causal link between ChLL and SARS-CoV-2 infection has not been unequivocally established.In this case series, we present demographic, clinical, laboratory, and histopathological information regarding 27 young patients with a clinical diagnosis of ChLL who referred to the Dermatology Unit of Papa Giovanni XXIII Hospital, Bergamo, Italy, from 1 April 2020 to 1 June 2020.The mean age was 14.2 years, and 21 patients (78%) experienced mild systemic symptoms a median of 28 days before the onset of cutaneous lesions. ChLL mostly involved the feet (20 patients - 74%). Among acral lesions, we identified three different clinical patterns: (i) chilblains in 20 patients (74%); (ii) fixed erythematous macules in 4 children (15%); (iii) erythrocyanosis in 3 female patients (11%). Blood examinations and viral serologies, including parvovirus B19, cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and coxsackievirus were normal in all. Three patients (11%) underwent nasopharyngeal swab for RT-PCR for SARS-CoV-2 showing only 1 positive. Histopathological examinations of 7 skin biopsies confirmed the clinical diagnosis of chilblains; vessel thrombi were observed only in 1 case. Our findings failed to demonstrate the direct presence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in skin biopsies, both with real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and RNAscope in situ hybridization (ISH).Limited number of cases, unavailability of laboratory confirmation of COVID-19 in all patients, potential methodological weakness, and latency of skin biopsies in comparison to cutaneous lesions onset.These observations may support the hypothesis of an inflammatory pathogenesis rather than the presence of peripheral viral particles. Although, we could not exclude an early phase of viral endothelial damage followed by an IFN-I or complement-mediated inflammatory phase. Further observations on a large number of patients are needed to confirm this hypothesis.
Kim, JS;Williams, KC;Kirkland, RA;Schade, R;Freeman, KG;Cawthon, CR;Rautmann, AW;Smith, JM;Edwards, GL;Glenn, TC;Holmes, PV;de Lartigue, G;de La Serre, CB;
PMID: 37380023 | DOI: 10.1016/j.molmet.2023.101764
Obesity is associated with deficits in reward which have been linked to compensatory overeating. The vagus nerve is a direct neural pathway that conveys post-ingestive feedback from the gut to the brain, including the reward regions, and vagal activation causes stereotypical reward behaviors. Chronic high fat (HF) feeding alters vagal signaling potentially dampening food-associated reward. Microbiota composition changes rapidly with HF feeding, and a HF-type microbiota is sufficient to alter vagal structure and function. However, whether microbiota-driven alterations in vagal signaling affect host appetitive feeding behavior is unknown. Here, we investigate if microbiota composition modulates reward signaling and assess the role of the vagus in mediating microbiota to brain communication. Male germ-free Fisher rats were colonized with gastrointestinal contents from chow (low fat (LF) ConvLF) or HF (ConvHF) fed rats. Following colonization, ConvHF rats consumed significantly more food than ConvLF animals. ConvHF rats displayed lower feeding-induced extracellular DOPAC levels (a metabolite of dopamine) in the Nucleus Accumbens (NAc) as well as reduced motivation for HF foods compared to ConvLF rats. Dopamine receptor 2 (DDR2) expression levels in the NAc were also significantly lower in ConvHF animals. Similar deficits were observed in conventionally raised HF fed rats, showing that diet-driven alteration in reward can be initiated via microbiota. Selective gut to brain deafferentation restored DOPAC levels, DRD2 expression, and motivational drive in ConvHF rats. We concluded from these data that a HF-type microbiota is sufficient to alter appetitive feeding behavior and that bacteria to reward communication is mediated by the vagus nerve.
Moreno, E;Casajuana-Martin, N;Coyle, M;Campos, BC;Galaj, E;Del Torrent, CL;Seyedian, A;Rea, W;Cai, NS;Bonifazi, A;Florán, B;Xi, ZX;Guitart, X;Casadó, V;Newman, AH;Bishop, C;Pardo, L;Ferré, S;
PMID: 36182040 | DOI: 10.1016/j.phrs.2022.106476
A main rationale for the role of G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) heteromers as targets for drug development is the putative ability of selective ligands for specific GPCRs to change their pharmacological properties upon GPCR heteromerization. The present study provides a proof of concept for this rationale by demonstrating that heteromerization of dopamine D1 and D3 receptors (D1R and D3R) influences the pharmacological properties of three structurally similar selective dopamine D3R ligands, the phenylpiperazine derivatives PG01042, PG01037 and VK4-116. By using D1R-D3R heteromer-disrupting peptides, it could be demonstrated that the three D3R ligands display different D1R-D3R heteromer-dependent pharmacological properties: PG01042, acting as G protein-biased agonist, counteracted D1R-mediated signaling in the D1R-D3R heteromer; PG01037, acting as a D3R antagonist cross-antagonized D1R-mediated signaling in the D1R-D3R heteromer; and VK4-116 specifically acted as a ß-arrestin-biased agonist in the D1R-D3R heteromer. Molecular dynamics simulations predicted potential molecular mechanisms mediating these qualitatively different pharmacological properties of the selective D3R ligands that are dependent on D1R-D3R heteromerization. The results of in vitro experiments were paralleled by qualitatively different pharmacological properties of the D3R ligands in vivo. The results supported the involvement of D1R-D3R heteromers in the locomotor activation by D1R agonists in reserpinized mice and L-DOPA-induced dyskinesia in rats, highlighting the D1R-D3R heteromer as a main pharmacological target for L-DOPA-induced dyskinesia in Parkinson's disease. More generally, the present study implies that when suspecting its pathogenetic role, a GPCR heteromer, and not its individual GPCR units, should be considered as main target for drug development.
Caprioli D, Venniro M, Zhang M, Bossert JM, Warren BL, Hope BT, Shaham Y.
PMID: 27980115 | DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3091-16.2016
We recently developed a rat model of incubation of methamphetamine craving after choice-based voluntary abstinence. Here, we studied the role of dorsolateral and dorsomedial striatum (DLS, DMS) in this incubation.We trained rats to self-administer palatable food pellets (6 days, 6-h/d) and methamphetamine (12 days, 6-h/d). We then assessed relapse to methamphetamine seeking under extinction conditions after 1 and 21 abstinence days. Between tests, the rats underwent voluntary abstinence (using a discrete choice procedure between methamphetamine and food; 20 trials/day) for 19 days. We used in situ hybridization to measure co-labeling of the activity marker Fos with Drd1 and Drd2 in DMS and DLS after the tests. Based on the in situ hybridization co-labeling results, we tested the causal role of DMS D1- and D2-family receptors, and DMS neuronal ensembles in 'incubated' methamphetamine seeking, using selective dopamine receptor antagonists (SCH39166 or raclopride) and the Daun02 chemogenetic inactivation procedure, respectively.Methamphetamine seeking was higher after 21 days of voluntary abstinence than after 1 day (incubation of methamphetamine craving). The 'incubated' response was associated with increased Fos expression in DMS but not DLS; Fos was co-labeled with both Drd1 and Drd2 DMS injections of SCH39166 or raclopride selectively decreased methamphetamine seeking after 21 abstinence days. In Fos-lacZ transgenic rats, selective inactivation of relapse test-activated Fos neurons in DMS on abstinence day 18 decreased incubated methamphetamine seeking on day 21.Results demonstrate a role of DMS dopamine D1 and D2-receptors in incubation of methamphetamine craving after voluntary abstinence and that DMS neuronal ensembles mediate this incubation.
SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT:
In human addicts, abstinence is often self-imposed and relapse can be triggered by exposure to drug-associated cues that induce drug craving. We recently developed a rat model of incubation of methamphetamine craving after choice-based voluntary abstinence. Here, we used classical pharmacology, in situ hybridization, immunohistochemistry, and the Daun02 inactivation procedure to demonstrate a critical role of dorsomedial striatum neuronal ensembles in this new form of incubation of drug craving.
Viral mapping in COVID-19 deceased in the Augsburg autopsy series of the first wave: A multiorgan and multimethodological approach
Hirschbühl, K;Dintner, S;Beer, M;Wylezich, C;Schlegel, J;Delbridge, C;Borcherding, L;Lippert, J;Schiele, S;Müller, G;Moiraki, D;Spring, O;Wittmann, M;Kling, E;Braun, G;Kröncke, T;Claus, R;Märkl, B;Schaller, T;
PMID: 34280238 | DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0254872
COVID-19 is only partly understood, and the level of evidence available in terms of pathophysiology, epidemiology, therapy, and long-term outcome remains limited. During the early phase of the pandemic, it was necessary to effectively investigate all aspects of this new disease. Autopsy can be a valuable procedure to investigate the internal organs with special techniques to obtain information on the disease, especially the distribution and type of organ involvement.During the first wave of COVID-19 in Germany, autopsies of 19 deceased patients were performed. Besides gross examination, the organs were analyzed with standard histology and polymerase-chain-reaction for SARS-CoV-2. Polymerase chain reaction positive localizations were further analyzed with immunohistochemistry and RNA-in situ hybridization for SARS-CoV-2.Eighteen of 19 patients were found to have died due to COVID-19. Clinically relevant histological changes were only observed in the lungs. Diffuse alveolar damage in considerably different degrees was noted in 18 cases. Other organs, including the central nervous system, did not show specific micromorphological alterations. In terms of SARS-CoV-2 detection, the focus remains on the upper airways and lungs. This is true for both the number of positive samples and the viral load. A highly significant inverse correlation between the stage of diffuse alveolar damage and viral load was found on a case and a sample basis. Mediastinal lymph nodes and fat were also affected by the virus at high frequencies. By contrast, other organs rarely exhibited a viral infection. Moderate to strong correlations between the methods for detecting SARS-CoV-2 were observed for the lungs and for other organs.The lung is the most affected organ in gross examination, histology and polymerase chain reaction. SARS-CoV-2 detection in other organs did not reveal relevant or specific histological changes. Moreover, we did not find CNS involvement.
Charbogne P, Gardon O, Martín-García E, Keyworth HL, Matsui A, Mechling AE, Bienert T, Nasseef T, Robé A, Moquin L, Darcq E, Hamida SB, Robledo P, Matifas A, Befort K, Gavériaux-Ruff , Harsan LA, Von Everfeldt D, Hennig J, Gratton A, Kitchen I, Bailey A,
PMID: - | DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2016.12.022
Background
Mu opioid receptors (MORs) are central to pain control, drug reward and addictive behaviors, but underlying circuit mechanisms have been poorly explored by genetic approaches. Here we investigate the contribution of MORs expressed in GABAergic forebrain neurons to major biological effects of opiates, and also challenge the canonical disinhibition model of opiate reward.
Methods
We used Dlx5/6-mediated recombination to create conditional Oprm1 mice in GABAergic forebrain neurons. We characterized the genetic deletion by histology, electrophysiology and microdialysis, probed neuronal activation by c-Fos immunohistochemistry and resting state-functional magnetic resonance imaging, and investigated main behavioral responses to opiates, including motivation to obtain heroin and palatable food.
Results
Mutant mice showed MOR transcript deletion mainly in the striatum. In the ventral tegmental area (VTA), local MOR activity was intact, and reduced activity was only observed at the level of striatonigral afferents. Heroin-induced neuronal activation was modified at both sites, and whole-brain functional networks were altered in live animals. Morphine analgesia was not altered, neither was physical dependence to chronic morphine. In contrast, locomotor effects of heroin were abolished, and heroin-induced catalepsy was increased. Place preference to heroin was not modified, but remarkably, motivation to obtain heroin and palatable food was enhanced in operant self-administration procedures.
Conclusions
Our study reveals dissociable MOR functions across mesocorticolimbic networks. Thus beyond a well-established role in reward processing, operating at the level of local VTA neurons, MORs also moderate motivation for appetitive stimuli within forebrain circuits that drive motivated behaviors.
Liu, J;Wu, R;Seaman, R;Manz, KM;Johnson, B;Vu, J;Huang, Y;Zhang, Y;Robison, AJ;Neve, R;Grueter, BA;Dietz, D;Li, JX;
PMID: 35079125 | DOI: 10.1038/s41380-022-01448-3
Relapse remains a major challenge to the treatment of cocaine addiction. Recent studies suggested that the trace amine-associated receptor 1 (TAAR1) could be a promising target to treat cocaine addiction and relapse; however, the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Here, we aimed to investigate the neural mechanism underlying the role of TAAR1 in the drug priming-induced reinstatement of cocaine-seeking behavior in rats, an animal model of cocaine relapse. We focused on the shell subregion of nucleus accumbens (NAc), a key brain region of the brain reward system. We found that activation of TAAR1 by systemic and intra-NAc shell administration of the selective TAAR1 agonist RO5166017 attenuated drug-induced reinstatement of cocaine-seeking and prevented drug priming-induced CaMKIIα activity in the NAc shell. Activation of TAAR1 dampened the CaMKIIα/GluR1 signaling pathway in the NAc shell and reduced AMPAR-EPSCs on the NAc slice. Microinjection of the selective TAAR1 antagonist EPPTB into the NAc shell enhanced drug-induced reinstatement as well as potentiated CaMKIIα activity in the NAc shell. Furthermore, viral-mediated expression of CaMKIIα in the NAc shell prevented the behavioral effects of TAAR1 activation. Taken together, our findings indicate that TAAR1 regulates drug-induced reinstatement of cocaine-seeking by negatively regulating CaMKIIα activity in the NAc. Our findings elucidate a novel mechanism of TAAR1 in regulating drug-induced reinstatement of cocaine-seeking and further suggests that TAAR1 is a promising target for the treatment of cocaine relapse.
Teague, C;Picone, J;Wright, W;Browne, C;Silva, G;Futamura, R;Minier-Toribio, A;Estill, M;Ramakrishnan, A;Martinez-Rivera, F;Godino, A;Parise, E;Schmidt, K;Pulido, N;Lorsch, Z;Kim, J;Shen, L;Neve, R;Dong, Y;Nestler, E;Hamilton, P;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.07.022
Background Over the course of chronic drug use, brain transcriptional neuroadaptation are thought to contribute to a change in drug use behavior over time. The function of the transcription factor CREB within the nucleus accumbens (NAc) has been well documented in opposing the rewarding properties of many classes of drugs, yet the gene targets through which CREB causally manifests these lasting neuroadaptations remain unknown. Here, we identify zinc finger protein 189 (Zfp189) as a CREB target gene that is transcriptionally responsive to acute and chronic cocaine use within mouse NAc. Methods To query the role of the CREB-Zfp189 interaction in cocaine use, we virally delivered modified CRISPR/dCas9 constructs, capable of selectively localizing CREB to the Zfp189 gene promoter in the NAc of mice. Results We observe that CREB binding to the Zfp189 promoter increases Zfp189 expression and diminishes the reinforcing responses to cocaine. We show further that NAc Zfp189 expression is increased within D1 medium spiny neurons (MSNs) in response to acute cocaine, but increased in both D1 and D2 MSNs in response to chronic cocaine. CREB-mediated induction of Zfp189 potentiates electrophysiological activity of D1 and D2 MSNs - recapitulating the known effect of CREB on these neurons. Lastly, targeting CREB to the Zfp189 promoter within NAc Drd2-expressing neurons, but not Drd1-expressing neurons, was sufficient to diminish cocaine-conditioned behaviors. Conclusions Together, these findings point to the CREB-Zfp189 interaction within NAc Drd2+ neurons as a molecular signature of chronic cocaine use that is causal in counteracting the reinforcing effects of cocaine.
Successful hemostasis of bleeding gastric inflammatory fibroid polyp by endoscopic treatment in a patient with severe COVID-19
Clinical journal of gastroenterology
Murota, A;Yoshi, S;Okuda, R;Oowada, S;Yamakawa, T;Kazama, T;Hirayama, D;Ishigami, K;Yamano, HO;Narimatu, E;Sugita, S;Hasegawa, T;Nakase, H;
PMID: 33840076 | DOI: 10.1007/s12328-021-01402-w
The coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) has rapidly become a pandemic, resulting in a global suspension of non-emergency medical procedures such as screening endoscopic examinations. There have been several reports of COVID-19 patients presenting with gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhea and vomiting. In this report, we present a case of successful hemostasis of bleeding gastric inflammatory fibroid polyp by endoscopic treatment in a patient with severe COVID-19. The case was under mechanical ventilation with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), and the airway was on a closed circuit. This indicates that COVID-19 is associated with not only lung injury but also intestinal damage, and that proper protective protocols are essential in guaranteeing the best outcomes for patients and clinical professionals during this pandemic.