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View Full Version : Heroin addiction gene identified and blocked



Halifax Housewife
06-02-2005, 11:36 AM
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7445&feedId=online-news_rss20

"Scientists have not only identified a critical gene involved in heroin addiction relapse, but they have also successfully blocked it, eliminating cravings for the drug.

The study was conducted on heroin-addicted rats. But the researchers now think that, within a few years, better treatments will become available to human heroin users who cannot quit due to insidious cycles of relapse.

“Many people try to stop taking heroin, but in a few months almost all of them go back to using the drug,” said Ivan Diamond, at the Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center in California, US, and one of the research team.

David Shurtleff, director of the Division of Basic Neuroscience and Behavioral Research at the National Institute on Drug Abuse in Maryland, US, is encouraged by the research. “It will take creativity and additional research to translate this into usable therapies, but it does provide hope that we will be able to prevent compulsive drug seeking behaviour,” he told New Scientist.
Reward circuitry

Previous research has indicated that a section of the midbrain called the nucleus accumbens plays a central role in the “mental reward circuitry” of animals, such as rats and humans. This circuitry generates feelings of pleasure in response to drugs, as well as in response to other things, including food, sex and, in humans, work accomplishments.

Drugs like heroin, however, seem to over-stimulate the normal reward process to the point where users value their next fix more highly than food, water and other essentials. In 2004, a study revealed that cocaine causes a gene in the nucleus accumbens, called AGS3, to rapidly encode masses of proteins that are involved in the cravings and pleasure associated with the drug.

Diamond and his team isolated AGS3 genes and proteins in nucleus accumbens cells taken from newborn baby rats. After cloning and studying the cells in the lab, the researchers determined that AGS3’s drug-related functions are most active in the inner nucleus accumbens core as opposed to its outer shell region.

An AGS3 blocker was then created from a herpes virus. This temporarily binds to proteins within the reward circuit and blocks the cravings-pleasure cycle until the virus “washes out” of the body a few weeks later.
Eliminated desires

Heroin-addicted rats that were trained to give themselves the drug using a lever were injected with the AGS3 blocker into their nucleus accumbens after they had gone through a short period of withdrawal. A small dose of heroin then was administered to each rat.

Normally even such a tiny “taste” of the drug leads to cravings for more, but the blocker prevented the addiction relapse by eliminating these desires. The treatment produced no other observed behavioural side effects.

Diamond told New Scientist that a related treatment could become available to humans within the next couple of years. His colleague Krista McFarland, at the Medical University of South Carolina, added that one of the challenges will be to find a safe method of administering the blocker to people."

Great news. :)

Meat Puppet
06-02-2005, 12:31 PM
damn

theundeadhero
06-02-2005, 12:41 PM
Smurfers find this out now. 11 years after Kurt dies :(

Old Manus
06-02-2005, 01:26 PM
Shame.

gokufusionss1
06-02-2005, 01:58 PM
heroin addiction isn't genetic it's a chemcial inbalance in the brain causing cravings.

The Jamie Star Scenario
06-02-2005, 03:04 PM
Of course it involves genetics. Nearly everything involved in body mechanisms has a genetic predisposition. Just like alcoholics, alcohol abuse tends to have a genetic side to it for some people. It would only be natural that some people would be greater affect by herion than others and more likely to relapse.
Smurfers find this out now. 11 years after Kurt dies :(Ah well, sucks to be him (he obviously thought so too).

Nod
06-02-2005, 03:11 PM
Great stuff. Now if they could just stop people from having access to heroin in the first place......

The Jamie Star Scenario
06-02-2005, 03:28 PM
Great stuff. Now if they could just stop people from having access to heroin in the first place......Drugs are part of society; they will never be completely eradicated.

Meat Puppet
06-02-2005, 04:29 PM
downtown there's a man who sells heroin out of his trench coat
in broad daylight
i told the police but they laughed and told me to go back to my imaginary world
i told them again and they beat me with their flashlights

Jojee
06-02-2005, 04:31 PM
Great, then they'll find one for cocaine and crack and alcohol and smoking, etc, and no one will be addicted to anything anymore ^_^

Meat Puppet
06-02-2005, 04:33 PM
Great, then they'll find one for cocaine and crack and alcohol and smoking, etc, and no one will be addicted to anything anymore ^_^

hopefully they'll get the love one, too

Jojee
06-02-2005, 04:34 PM
NOOOooooo...!

DMKA
06-02-2005, 06:09 PM
Smurfers find this out now. 11 years after Kurt dies :(
You haven't fooled me. I know you just faked your own death like Tupac. I mean, that pic of you in the album is a dead giveaway.

theundeadhero
06-03-2005, 03:54 AM
You haven't fooled me. I know you just faked your own death like Tupac. I mean, that pic of you in the album is a dead giveaway.:shifty:

That was photoshopped to express my love for Meat Puppet.

Necronopticous
06-03-2005, 04:04 AM
This is great news.

MecaKane
06-03-2005, 09:38 PM
Why are people waisting money on finding easy ways out for junkies?

ZeZipster
06-03-2005, 09:56 PM
Why are people waisting money on finding easy ways out for junkies?

The same reason you were fed as a child.

Pity.

-N-
06-03-2005, 10:42 PM
Interesting news. Cool.