Authors
Jennifer A DiNieri, Xinyu Wang, Henrietta Szutorisz, Sabrina M Spano, Jasbir Kaur, Patrizia Casaccia, Diana Dow-Edwards, Yasmin L Hurd
Publication date
2011/10/15
Journal
Biological psychiatry
Volume
70
Issue
8
Pages
763-769
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
BACKGROUND
Prenatal cannabis exposure has been linked to addiction vulnerability, but the neurobiology underlying this risk is unknown.
METHODS
Striatal dopamine and opioid-related genes were studied in human fetal subjects exposed to cannabis (as well as cigarettes and alcohol). Cannabis-related gene disturbances observed in the human fetus were subsequently characterized with an animal model of prenatal Δ-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) (.15 mg/kg) exposure.
RESULTS
Prenatal cannabis exposure decreased dopamine receptor D2 (DRD2) messenger RNA expression in the human ventral striatum (nucleus accumbens [NAc]), a key brain reward region. No significant alterations were observed for the other genes in cannabis-exposed subjects. Maternal cigarette use was associated with reduced NAc prodynorphin messenger RNA expression, and alcohol exposure induced broad alterations …
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