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Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2005 Aug 10; [Epub ahead
of print] |
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The mesolimbic dopamine system: The final
common pathway for the reinforcing effect of drugs of abuse?
Pierce RC,
Kumaresan V.
Departments of Pharmacology and Psychiatry, Boston University
School of Medicine, 715 Albany Street, L603 Boston, MA 02118,
USA.
In this review we will critically assess the hypothesis that the
reinforcing effect of virtually all drugs of abuse is primarily
dependent on activation of the mesolimbic dopamine system. The
focus is on five classes of abused drugs: psychostimulants,
opiates, ethanol, cannabinoids and nicotine. For each of these
drug classes, the pharmacological and physiological mechanisms
underlying the direct or indirect influence on mesolimbic
dopamine transmission will be reviewed. Next, we evaluate
behavioral pharmacological experiments that specifically assess
the influence of activation of the mesolimbic dopamine system on
drug reinforcement, with particular emphasis on animal
experiments using drug self-administration paradigms. There is
overwhelming evidence that all five classes of abused drugs
increase dopamine transmission in limbic regions of the brain
through interactions with a variety of transporters, ionotropic
receptors and metabotropic receptors. Behavioral pharmacological
experiments indicate that increased dopamine transmission is
clearly both necessary and sufficient to promote psychostimulant
reinforcement. For the other four classes of abused substances,
self-administration experiments suggest that although increasing
mesolimbic dopamine transmission plays an important role in the
reinforcing effects of opiates, ethanol, cannabinoids and
nicotine, there are also dopamine-independent processes that
contribute significantly to the reinforcing effects of these
compounds.
PMID: 16099045 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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