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The Journal of Neuroscience, 2001, 21:RC146:1-5
RAPID COMMUNICATION
Cannabinoids Inhibit the Formation of New Synapses between
Hippocampal Neurons in Culture
Daniel
Kim and
Stanley A.
Thayer
Department of Pharmacology, University of Minnesota Medical School,
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455-0217
The principal psychoactive ingredient in marijuana,
9-tetrahydrocannabinol, has been shown to inhibit
adenylyl cyclase activity in vitro and can lead to
impairment of memory in vivo. cAMP-induced changes in
synaptic plasticity are thought to underlie memory formation. We
examined the effects of cannabinoid receptor agonists on
forskolin-induced formation of new synapses between rat hippocampal neurons in culture. Functional synaptic boutons were identified with
FM1-43-based digital imaging. Cannabimimetic drugs prevented the
recruitment of new synapses by inhibiting the formation of cAMP. The
inhibition produced by Win55212-2, a synthetic cannabinoid receptor
agonist, was stereoselective and was reversed by a selective CB1
receptor antagonist. Both 9-tetrahydrocannabinol and the
endogenous ligand, anandamide, inhibited the formation of new synapses.
Win55212-2 blocked the formation of new synapses induced by forskolin,
but not those evoked by a membrane permeant cAMP analog. Thus,
activation of cannabinoid receptors can modulate synaptic plasticity
independent of direct effects on neurotransmitter release. Preventing
the formation of new synapses may contribute to the impairment of
memory produced by cannabinoids.
Key words:
cannabinoids; synapse formation; FM1-43; 9-tetrahydrocannabinol; cAMP; synaptic plasticity; hippocampal cultures
Copyright © Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474//$05.00/0
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