9/15/04 News Release
PRINT MEDIA CONTACT: Amy Adams at (650) 723-3900 ()
BROADCAST MEDIA CONTACT: M.A. Malone at (650) 723-6912 ()
MARIJUANA-LIKE CHEMICALS IN THE BRAIN CALM NEURONS, SAY STANFORD RESEARCHERS
STANFORD, Calif. – From the munchies to the giggles to paranoia,
smoking marijuana causes widespread changes in the brain. Now researchers
at Stanford University School of Medicine are a step closer to understanding
how the drug’s active ingredients – tetrahydrocannabinol and
related compounds, called cannabinoids – may exert their effects.
David Prince, MD, the Edward F. and Irene Thiele Pimley Professor of
Neurology and Neurological Sciences, and his colleagues found that a group
of neurons that act as information gatekeepers in the brain’s major
information processing center, called the cerebral cortex, release cannabinoids
that quiet their own activity. This form of self-inhibition is a novel
way for neurons to regulate their own ability to send messages to their
neighbors. Tetrahydrocannabinol from marijuana may work its brain-altering
magic by binding to these same cells.
“Marijuana is a major drug of abuse with actions in the brain that
aren’t entirely known. Now we understand one piece of the puzzle,”
Prince said. The work of Prince and his colleagues John R. Huguenard,
PhD, associate professor of neurology and neurological sciences, and Alberto
Bacci, PhD, staff research associate, is published in the Sept. 16 issue
of Nature.
The cells under scrutiny lie in the cerebral cortex. This region processes
information from the eyes, ears, skin and other sense organs, regulates
movement and performs complex functions such as those involved in thinking,
learning and emotions. The cortex contains two major types of nerve cells:
pyramidal neurons that excite both local and more distant neighbors, and
inhibitory interneurons that act as local dimming switches, shutting down
the activity of nearby brain cells. The inhibitory interneurons prevent
the brain from taking in and responding to every thought, sight or sound
it encounters. They also protect against runaway excitation such as that
seen in epilepsy.
In previous work, other researchers had found that pyramidal cells manufacture
and release cannabinoids that bind to a receptor on the membrane of interneurons.
In this process, called retrograde signaling, the pyramidal cell does
the equivalent of slipping its guardian interneuron some sleeping pills.
It frees itself from inhibition by releasing cannabinoids that briefly
decrease the interneuron’s ability to release inhibitory molecules.
In contrast, Bacci and his colleagues found that interneurons can drug
themselves when they get repetitively excited, triggering a self-inhibition
process. The class of interneurons the researchers studied, the so-called
“LTS cells” of the cerebral cortex, manufacture and release
cannabinoids that bind to their own cannabinoid receptors and shut down
their ability to signal other neurons. By shutting themselves off, the
interneurons block their quieting action on the excitatory pyramidal cells
– an effect that can last as long as 35 minutes, much longer than
what had been seen with retrograde inhibition. Without the quieting effect,
pyramidal cells signal more intensely, triggering a higher level of activity
in circuits of the cortex.
Prince said it’s too early to know exactly how marijuana binding
to the cannabinoid receptor exerts its behavioral effects. However, because
the interneurons inhibit cells that have such wide-ranging effects, it’s
no surprise that the drug alters how people perceive the world around
them. “A loss of inhibition in pyramidal cells could produce changes
in perception, in motor function and in everything the cerebral cortex
does,” he said.
The Stanford team hopes that by studying how these receptors work, researchers
may learn how to make drugs that selectively bind and block subtypes of
cannabinoid receptors on one type of cell but not another. This may be
one way to harness the medically useful aspect of marijuana without causing
brain-altering side effects.
According to Prince, such drugs could also be useful in treating epilepsy.
Pyramidal cells are among those that fire out of control during a seizure.
One reason these cells fire so rapidly may be that interneurons get shut
down. A drug that blocks cannabinoid receptors on some types of inhibitory
interneurons might allow them to continue quieting the pyramidal cells
during periods of intense activity.
# # #
Stanford University Medical Center integrates research, medical education and
patient care at its three institutions - Stanford
University School of Medicine, Stanford
Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard
Children's Hospital. For more information, please visit the Office of Communication
& Public Affairs site at http://mednews.stanford.edu/.