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Brain.

Protein found to regulate cocaine-craving after withdrawal

By ELLEN GOLDBAUM

Published August 3, 2016 This content is archived.

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Laura Feltri.
“The finding highlights how highly addictive drugs, such as cocaine, alter the brain and why relapse after abstinence is so common and so difficult to reverse. ”
David M. Dietz, associate professor
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology

Neuroscientists know that cocaine addiction and withdrawal rewire the brain. But figuring out how to disrupt those changes to treat addiction requires an extremely detailed understanding of how those changes occur.

Now, in a paper published recently in Biological Psychiatry, researchers at the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences have identified an important piece in the puzzle.

Led by David M. Dietz, associate professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, the team has discovered that a protein in the brain’s reward center, the nucleus accumbens, regulates genes that help drive the craving for cocaine after a period of withdrawal. Zi-jun Wang, a postdoctoral fellow in the department, is first author.

The work is funded by a grant awarded in 2014 to Dietz from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to study the short- and long-term neurobiological changes — known as neuroplasticity — induced by cocaine addiction.

“The finding highlights how highly addictive drugs, such as cocaine, alter the brain and why relapse after abstinence is so common and so difficult to reverse,” Dietz says.

Plasticity factor

In 2015, Dietz and his colleagues identified a transcription factor called SMAD3 as playing an essential role in the brain plasticity that cocaine induces, and leading to relapse behaviors after a period of withdrawal. Transcription factors help control which genes are expressed and which are not.

In the current experiments, laboratory animals self-administered cocaine and then experienced abstinence for seven days. After the abstinence period, the researchers saw increased expression of a protein called BRG1 and increased interaction between it and the transcription factor SMAD3.

“We noticed that this transcription factor, which was critical in mediating relapse-like behaviors, was also known to interact with a molecule like BRG1 in other cells in the body,” Dietz explains. “We wanted to know if BRG1 and this transcription factor also interact following cocaine addiction and if those interactions helped regulate genes in these individuals.”

Cocaine not only changes the expression of BRG1, the UB researchers learned, but it also changes how BRG1 interacts with transcription factors known to be essential in mediating gene expression following cocaine use. “In this way, BRG1 facilitates how transcription factors regulate genes after cocaine use and withdrawal,” Dietz says.

DNA access

BRG1 is a chromatin remodeler, meaning that it is involved in the dynamic structural changes that impact chromatin, the mass of genetic material in the cell nucleus that condenses into chromosomes. Dietz explains that BRG1 therefore controls the access that transcription factors have to DNA, in part by possibly changing the chromatin structure itself so that it is more or less accessible to DNA.

“We need a more defined and clear picture of how drugs of abuse change the brain so that we can really begin to understand what may be a true target for treatment,” he says. “This research more strongly points to the possibility that the interaction of SMAD3 with BRG1 may be a key possibility for such a treatment target.”

Along with Wang and Dietz, other co-authors are Jennifer A. Martin, Lauren E. Mueller and Aaron Caccamise, graduate students; Craig T. Werner, postdoctoral associate; and Amy M. Gancarz and Jun-Xu Liu, MD, associate professor, all in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, as well as Rachael L. Neve of the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.