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Volume 16, Number 24,
Issue of December 15, 1996
pp. 8019-8026
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Influence of Cocaine on the JAK-STAT Pathway in the Mesolimbic
Dopamine System
Received July 9, 1996; revised Sept. 17, 1996; accepted Sept. 20, 1996.
Melissa T. Berhow1,
Noboru Hiroi1,
Linda A. Kobierski2,
Steven E. Hyman2, and
Eric J. Nestler1
1 Laboratory of Molecular Psychiatry, Departments of
Psychiatry and Pharmacology, Yale University School of Medicine,
Connecticut Mental Health Center, New Haven, Connecticut 06508, and
2 Molecular and Developmental Neuroscience, Harvard Medical
School, Massachusetts General Hospital CNY-2, Charlestown,
Massachusetts 02129
Chronic exposure to cocaine produces characteristic biochemical
adaptations within the rat ventral tegmental area (VTA), a brain region
rich in dopaminergic neurons implicated in the reinforcing and
locomotor-activating properties of cocaine. Some of these changes are
mimicked by chronic ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) infusions into
the same brain area. We show in this study that chronic cocaine
treatment regulates the signal transduction pathway used by CNTF
specifically in the VTA. There is an increase in immunoreactivity of
Janus kinase (JAK2), a CNTF-regulated protein tyrosine kinase, in the
VTA after chronic but not acute cocaine administration. This increase
is not seen in the nearby substantia nigra or several other brain
regions studied. Furthermore, this increase in JAK2 is not seen after
chronic administration of other psychotropic drugs and was not observed
for JAK1. The increase in JAK2 levels is associated with an increased
responsiveness of the system to acute CNTF infusion into the VTA, as
measured by induction in this brain region of signal transducers and
activators of transcription (STAT) DNA binding activity and of Fos-like
proteins, two known functional endpoints of JAK activation.
Double-labeling immunohistochemical studies show that JAK2
immunoreactivity in the VTA is enriched in dopaminergic and
nondopaminergic cells, both of which exhibit increased JAK2
immunoreactivity after chronic cocaine treatment. These findings
suggest a scheme whereby some of the effects of chronic cocaine on VTA
dopaminergic neurons are mediated directly by regulation of the
JAK-STAT pathway in these cells, as well as perhaps indirectly by
regulation of this pathway in nondopaminergic cells.
Key words:
JAK;
STAT;
c-Fos;
tyrosine hydroxylase;
VTA;
glia
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