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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 1, 2002, 22(9):3321-3325
MINI REVIEW
Neural Systems Underlying Opiate Addiction
Taco J.
De Vries1 and
Toni S.
Shippenberg2
1 Research Institute Neurosciences Vrije Universiteit,
Drug Abuse Program, Department of Medical Pharmacology, Vrije
Universiteit Medical Center, 1081 BT Amsterdam, The Netherlands, and
2 Integrative Neuroscience Section, Behavioral Neuroscience
Branch, National Institutes of Health/National Institute on Drug Abuse
Intramural Research Program, Baltimore, Maryland 21224
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ARTICLE |
Opiate addiction is a chronically
relapsing disorder that is characterized by compulsive drug taking, an
inability to limit intake, and bouts of intense drug craving that can
be precipitated by the mere presence of people, places, or objects
previously associated with drug use. Although knowledge of the neural
mechanisms that underlie the transition from casual drug use to
addiction is still incomplete, the development of animal models that
enable differentiation of the various stages of the addiction process have provided new insights regarding the neural substrates on which
opiates act to affect and subsequently control behavior. Data derived from these models are consistent with the hypothesis that
opiates, like psychostimulants, are initially abused by virtue of their
rewarding or hedonic effects. However, as will be discussed in this
review, the repeated use of opiates induces alterations in
neurotransmitter and neuropeptide systems that regulate
incentive-motivation and stress-responsiveness. Increasing evidence
indicates that the dysregulation of these systems underlies the
compulsive use and loss of control of drug-taking that characterizes
opiate and other addictions.
Studies examining the neural basis of drug addiction have been guided
by the premise that the motivation of an addict to take drugs results
from the desire to experience the hedonic (e.g., rewarding) effects of
the drug as well as from the desire to avoid the anhedonia and aversive
consequences of drug withdrawal (Wikler, 1948 ; Koob et al., 1989 ). More
recently, it has been posited that repeated drug use induces
long-lasting adaptations in neural systems that mediate a subcomponent
of drug reward, termed incentive salience (Robinson and Berridge,
1993 ). Hypersensitivity (e.g., sensitization) of these systems is
hypothesized to lead to an enhanced incentive value of drug-related
stimuli, compulsive patterns of drug seeking, and the vulnerability to
relapse that persists long after the cessation of drug use.
In view of the documented involvement of the mesoaccumbens dopamine
(DA) system in incentive motivation and psycho-stimulant-induced reward (Koob et al., 1998 ; Schultz et al., 1998 ), studies examining the
neural basis of opiate addiction have focused on the mesolimbic DA
projection from the ventral tegmental area (VTA) to the nucleus accumbens (NAc), and to a lesser extent on its afferent and efferent projection areas such as medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), amygdala, and
ventral pallidum. In contrast to the study of
psychostimulants, a systematic examination of the neuroanatomical and
neurochemical substrates underlying the various stages of opiate
addiction is only just beginning.
Systems involved in opiate self-administration
Opiate drugs exert their effects by binding to three opioid
receptor types (µ, , and ) and mimicking the actions of
endogenous opioid peptides, the endorphins, endomorphins, enkephalins,
and dynorphins. The µ-opioid receptor (MOR) subtype is critical for the rewarding effects of heroin and morphine. Blockade of MORs but not other opioid receptors attenuates opiate
self-administration, and constitutive deletion of MORs attenuates the
conditioned preferences that animals exhibit for contextual cues
previously associated with opiate administration (Negus et al., 1993 ;
Matthes et al., 1996 ). Opiates induce membrane hyperpolarization and
neuronal inhibition in multiple structures, including those that
provide major afferent input to the VTA; i.e., NAc and ventral pallidum as primary sources of GABA input, PFC, amygdala, and mediodorsal thalamus as primary sources of glutamate input, and the
pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus as a source of acetylcholine input.
These structures, which comprise the
cortical-pallidal-striatal circuit, are characterized by a
high density of opiate receptors (Mansour et al., 1995 ) and dense
reciprocal connections (Groenewegen et al., 1996 ). This circuit has
been implicated in the mediation of goal-directed behavior (Mogenson et
al., 1980 ) and the rewarding effects of psychostimulants (Pierce and
Kalivas, 1997 ; Koob et al., 1998 ).
Blockade of MORs in the VTA or NAc attenuates heroin
self-administration as well as the conditioned approach behavior that develops to cues associated with morphine administration, whereas infusion of opiates into these regions support these behaviors (for
review, see Shippenberg and Elmer, 1998 ). The integrity of the NAc is
essential for opiate and psychostimulant self-administration (Zito et
al., 1985 ). These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that a
similar circuitry mediates the rewarding effects of these agents.
MOR agonists activate VTA DA neurons and enhance DA release in the NAc
via inhibition of GABA neurons (DiChiara and Imperato, 1988 ; Johnson
and North, 1992 ). Whether DA is the specific effector responsible for
the rewarding effects of opiates, as has been demonstrated for
psychostimulants, remains controversial. In particular, it is unclear
whether these effects are specific to the encoding of the rewarding
effects of opiates or represent a more generalized role of DA in reward
prediction function (Schultz et al., 1998 ). Heroin self-administration
in rats is associated with both tonic and phasic increases in NAc DA
release and is attenuated by the intra-VTA infusion of a GABA-B
receptor antagonist (Kiyatkin et al., 1993 ; Xi and Stein, 1999 ). The
pattern of VTA cell firing within a single self-administration session
is consistent with the view that mesocorticolimbic DA activation is
important for the activational and motivational aspects of
heroin-taking behavior in experienced individuals. It is also in accord
with an important role of DA release and NAc DA D1 receptors in the
conditioned responses that develop to environmental cues predicting
opiate administration (Shippenberg and Elmer, 1998 ).
Electrophysiological studies, however, indicate that although
overlapping subpopulations of NAc and mPFC neurons may become active
during opiate and psychostimulant self-administration, heterogeneous
neuronal circuits mediate the rewarding actions of these drugs (Chang
et al., 1998 ). Behavioral evidence supports this conclusion. Thus,
although NAc NMDA receptors are required for stimulant
self-administration, this is not the case for heroin (for review, see
Trujillo, 2000 ). Similarly, the pedunculopontine nucleus, which
receives extensive projections from regions comprising the
cortical-striatal-thalamic circuit, is necessary for the
conditioned reinforcing effects of opiates but not psychostimulants
(Bechara et al., 1998 ). Interestingly, however, and in contrast to
psychostimulants, there is increasing evidence for involvement of
cannabinoid systems in mediating the rewarding effects of opiates. CB1
receptor antagonists or deletion of the CB1 receptor prevents
acquisition of morphine self-administration and the conditioned
reinforcing effects of this opiate (Ledent et al., 1999 ; Mas-Nieto et
al., 2001 ). Modulation of the biochemical and pharmacological effects
of cannabinoids by opioid receptor ligands, together with the
anatomical distribution of CB1 receptors in the
cortical-pallidal-thalamic circuitry, suggests that there may
be considerable overlap in the neural substrates mediating the
rewarding effects of cannabinoids and opiates (Manzanares et al.,
1999 ).
Neuroadaptations resulting from chronic opiate use
As with psychostimulants, cessation of chronic opiate use induces
functional changes in mesolimbic DA neurons opposite to those observed
during drug administration (Diana et al., 1993 ). Decreased DA
neurotransmission may underlie anhedonia and dysphoria during the early
phase of drug abstinence, and avoidance of these aversive states may
lead to reinstatement of drug use (Koob et al., 1989 ). Fundamental
questions exist as to whether the aversive effects of opiate withdrawal
are the primary impetus leading to relapse. However, it is clear that
DA D2 receptor agonists attenuate somatic signs of opiate withdrawal
(Harris and Aston-Jones, 1994 ). In contrast, DA D2 receptor antagonists
induce affective signs of withdrawal in morphine-dependent
animals and attenuate the conditioned reinforcing effects of opiates in
dependent animals (Funada and Shippenberg, 1996 ; Bechara et al., 1998 ).
Therefore, DA mechanisms are involved in the aversive effects of opiate
withdrawal, suggesting that the motivational effects of opiate
withdrawal result, at least in part, from the disruption of the same
circuits implicated in mediating drug reward.
Not surprisingly, repeated opiate use alters the activity of NAc medium
spiny neurons that are primary targets of DA neurons. These output
neurons, which contain GABA and the opioid peptides dynorphin and
enkephalin, as well as substance P, project to the ventral pallidum and
VTA. They also have extensive axon collaterals in the NAc. Alterations
in these output neurons may contribute to the aversive consequences of
opiate withdrawal.
The administration of opioid receptor antagonists, such as naloxone, to
morphine-dependent animals produces somatic and affective signs
of withdrawal. These effects have been attributed to the antagonism of
MORs in the NAc and other regions, including amygdala, VTA, and locus
coeruleus (Stinus et al., 1990 ). However, expression of enkephalin, an
opioid peptide that stimulates NAc DA release, is decreased in the NAc
during opiate withdrawal (Turchan et al., 1997). Acute
administration of selective -opioid receptor (DOR) antagonists to
opiate-dependent animals precipitates affective signs of
withdrawal. However, in contrast to MOR antagonists, they are
ineffective in precipitating a quantifiable somatic withdrawal syndrome
(Funada et al., 1996 ). These findings are noteworthy in view of the
postulated involvement of DORs in emotional reactivity (Filliol et al.,
2000 ) and indicate that MOR activation, as has been observed in the
ventral pallidum (Olive and Maidment, 1998 ), may stimulate enkephalin
release and that dysregulation of DOR systems may contribute to
withdrawal-induced dysphoria. Consistent with this hypothesis is the
recent finding of increased cell-surface expression of DORs after
chronic morphine exposure (Cahill et al., 2001 ).
Dynorphin, the endogenous ligand for the -opioid receptor (KOR), is
also released by medium spiny neurons. KOR agonists produce dysphoria
and negative effective states (Pfeiffer et al., 1986 ) caused by
the activation of NAc opioid receptors and inhibition of DA release
(Shippenberg and Elmer, 1998 ). A tonically active NAc KOR system
regulating basal DA release has also been demonstrated. Although acute
opiate administration does not modify dynorphin expression, increased
peptide expression is observed after abstinence from repeated opiate
administration (Bronstein et al., 1988 ). This effect may result from
opiate-induced upregulation of the cAMP pathway and the induction of
the gene transcription regulator, cAMP response element-binding protein
(CREB) (Nestler, 2001 ). The opiate withdrawal syndrome is
attenuated after disruption of the genes encoding CREB or KORs
(Maldonado et al., 1996 ; Simonin et al., 1998 ), suggesting that
upregulation of the dynorphin system may be a key homeostatic
adaptation that, in the presence of drug, diminishes further drug
responsiveness (e.g., enhanced DA release), but that in the absence of
drug may contribute to the dysphoria and anhedonia that characterizes
the early phase of opiate withdrawal. Evidence that elevated levels of
dynorphin may also contribute to alterations in behavior and DA
neurotransmission that occur during abstinence from psychostimulants
has also been obtained (Shippenberg et al., 2001 ). Interestingly,
protracted abstinence from opiates and psychostimulants is
characterized by normalization of dynorphin levels and an enhancement
of drug-evoked NAc DA release. Hypersensitivity of DA neurons may
underlie the long-term expression of behavioral sensitization to
various drugs of abuse as well as the reinstatement of compulsive
drug-seeking behavior (Robinson and Berridge, 1993 ; Vanderschuren
and Kalivas, 2000 ), suggesting that alterations in the
dynorphin/KOR receptor system may play a global role in drug craving
and relapse to addiction.
Repeated use of opiates also induces neuroadaptations in other brain
regions (e.g., basolateral amygdala, locus coeruleus, bed nucleus of
the stria terminalis) and neurotransmitter systems (e.g., glutamate,
norepinephrine, CRF). Each of these adaptations may be involved in
expression of the aversive effects of the opiate-withdrawal syndrome
(Kreek and Koob, 1998 ). Alterations in the activity of CRF neurons are
noteworthy given the involvement of stress in compulsive drug seeking
and the role of this peptide in regulating DA release and opioid
peptides in the mesolimbic system and its projection areas (Kreek and
Koob, 1998 ; Sarnyai et al., 2001 ). Behavioral and neurochemical results
indicate that CRF neurons are activated during acute withdrawal from
opiates and that this effect may contribute to both the anxiety of
withdrawal and the vulnerability to relapse that persists as abstinence progresses.
Relapse to opiates
Our understanding of the neural systems important for relapse to
opiate-seeking behavior is still at its infancy. Recent advances in
animal models have indicated that conditions that intensify drug
craving or provoke drug relapse in humans (i.e., stress; renewed
contact with the drug, or environmental stimuli that have signaled drug
availability) reliably reinstate drug seeking in laboratory animals
even after prolonged abstinence (Self and Nestler, 1998 ; Shaham et al.,
2000 ; Stewart, 2000 ). The strong face validity of these
reinstatement models provides a useful tool for studying the
neurobiological mechanisms involved in relapse to opiate seeking.
Davis and Smith (1976) first showed that morphine, as well as a
stimulus previously associated with the intravenous infusion of
morphine, was able to reinstate opiate-seeking behavior in experimental
animals. Later studies showed that a priming injection of heroin or
exposure to mild unpredictable footshock stress were effective in
eliciting heroin-seeking behavior in animals with a previous history of
heroin self-administration (Shaham et al., 2000 ; Stewart, 2000 ).
Although the role of DA in mediating the rewarding effects of opiates
remains controversial, there is substantial evidence for a role of the
mesolimbic DA system in mediating the priming effects of opiates on
heroin seeking. Intra-NAc infusion of amphetamine, a psychostimulant
that stimulates DA release, is effective in reinstating heroin seeking,
and a similar response is observed after VTA infusion of morphine doses
that increase NAc and mPFC DA release. In contrast, infusions of
morphine into the NAc fail to stimulate DA release and are ineffective
in opiate reinstatement models (for review, see Stewart, 2000 ).
DA D2 receptor antagonists block heroin-induced reinstatement
(Ettenberg et al., 1996 ; Shaham and Stewart, 1996 ), suggesting an
important role of this DA receptor. In contrast, the DA D1 receptor
antagonist, SCH-23390, attenuates heroin-induced reinstatement only at
doses producing motor impairment (Shaham and Stewart, 1996 ). Data
regarding the ability of DA receptor agonists to mimic the effects of
heroin priming also indicate involvement of DA D2 receptors in heroin
seeking (Wise et al., 1990 ; De Vries et al., 2002 ). The priming effect
of the DA D2 receptor agonist quinpirole is robust during the first
week of withdrawal but dissipates after 3 weeks of withdrawal (De Vries
et al., 2002 ). As discussed above, DA D2 receptor antagonists produce
effective signs of withdrawal in morphine-dependent rats (Funada et
al., 1996 ). However, DA D2 receptor agonists administered during the
early phase of opiate withdrawal induce marked behavioral activation
(Druhan et al., 2000 ), indicating that DA D2 receptor activation during
the early phase of withdrawal may lead, in fact, to enhanced motivation for drug. This conclusion is consistent with a critical role of DA D2
receptors in the motivational effects of opiates in the opiate-dependent as compared with the non-dependent state (Bechara et
al., 1998 ; Dockstader et al., 2001 ). It may also explain previous inconsistent effects of DA D2 receptor antagonists on heroin
self-administration (Ettenberg et al., 1982 ; Mello and Negus,
1996 ).
Priming with the DA D1 receptor agonist SKF 82958 or the non-selective
DA receptor agonist apomorphine does not reinstate heroin seeking (De
Vries et al., 1999 ; Stewart, 2000 ). Therefore, at late withdrawal
stages (>3 weeks), neither D1, D2, nor non-selective agonists mimic
the priming effects of heroin. Because indirect DA agonists like
amphetamine and cocaine are effective in reinstating heroin seeking at
later stages of withdrawal (De Vries et al., 1999 ), the role of DA in
mediating heroin seeking that occurs during protracted withdrawal
remains unclear.
Data regarding the role of other neurotransmitter systems in opiate
relapse is limited. An involvement of glutamatergic neurons in relapse
to cocaine seeking has been presented (Cornish and Kalivas, 2000 ).
However, acamprosate, a compound that alters glutamate neurotransmission and is used in alcohol relapse prevention programs, exerts no effect on heroin-induced reinstatement of heroin seeking (Spanagel et al., 1998 ).
A role of stress in relapse to compulsive drug seeking, as observed in
human addicts, has been demonstrated in laboratory animals. Mild
footshock stress reliably reinstates heroin seeking in rats (Shaham and
Stewart, 1995 ; Ahmed et al., 2000 ), an effect that is mimicked by other
stressors, including food deprivation. Evidence for involvement of CRF
in the response to stress comes from studies showing that CRF
antagonists attenuate footshock-induced reinstatement of heroin
seeking, an effect that may be meditated within the bed nucleus of the
stria terminalis. Also, 2-adenoceptor agonists, presumably acting on noradrenergic neurons originating from
the lateral tegmental nuclei but not the locus coeruleus, prevent this
behavior. Other studies have shown that the effects of stress on
relapse are not dependent on the release of corticosterone, are
resistant to opioid receptor antagonists, and are relatively insensitive to DA receptor antagonists (for review, see Shaham et al.,
2000 ). Thus, although the effects of heroin priming appear to be
mediated by the same DA and opioid pathways involved in reward and
dependence, the stress-induced relapse to opiate addiction may result
from the activation of a distinct set of neuronal systems. At present,
however, fundamental questions exist as to whether there is convergence
of these systems and, if so, at what level.
Relatively few studies have examined the neural substrates underlying
relapse to opiate seeking in response to stimuli previously associated
with opiate administration. Using an operant runway task reinforced by
heroin administration, McFarland and Ettenberg (1997) showed that
heroin-predictive environmental stimuli reinstate running after this
behavior is extinguished. The DA D2 receptor antagonist haloperidol did
not modify the incentive motivational effects of these stimuli,
suggesting that DA systems may not play a critical role in this
behavior. In contrast, DA receptor (particularly D1) antagonists
attenuate cue-induced reinstatement of cocaine-seeking behavior (for
review, see Shalev et al., 2002 ). Marked differences between
cue-controlled heroin and cocaine seeking have also been observed in
second order schedules of reinforcement in which drug seeking is
maintained by contingent presentation of drug-paired stimuli. Thus,
under similar experimental conditions, discrete drug-associated cues
have a weak impact on heroin seeking relative to cocaine seeking
(Alderson et al., 2000 ). Also, basolateral amygdala lesions and partial
DA D3 receptor agonists, both of which impair cue-controlled cocaine
seeking (Everitt and Robbins, 2000 ), fail to alter heroin seeking.
It is unclear to what extent opiate withdrawal functions as a
motivational state that enhances the incentive value of opiates and can
explain relapse to addiction occurring during protracted abstinence.
Attempts to induce relapse to heroin seeking by precipitating withdrawal have been unsuccessful (Shaham and Stewart, 1995 ; Shaham et
al., 1996 ) (but see Hutcheson et al., 2001 ). In those studies in which
the drug intake of heroin was sufficient to induce somatic signs of
withdrawal symptoms during early withdrawal (1-2 d) (Shaham et al.,
1996 ), extinction behavior, a measure of drug seeking, and
footshock-induced reinstatement were maximal at time points in which
somatic signs of withdrawal had dissipated (Shalev et al., 2000 ). These
findings and those regarding the relationship between the duration of
cocaine abstinence and cue-induced reinstatement of cocaine seeking
(Grimm et al., 2001 ) suggest strongly that the vulnerability to relapse
is not related to the severity of the withdrawal signs.
According to the incentive-sensitization theory of addiction (Robinson
and Berridge, 1993 ), neuroadaptations that lead to the drug-induced
sensitization underlie the persistence of drug-seeking behavior and the
vulnerability to relapse that can occur after protracted abstinence.
Several studies have shown that the locomotor-activating and
conditioned-reinforcing effects of opiates are enhanced after repeated,
intermittent administration of opiates (Shippenberg et al., 1996 ;
Vanderschuren and Kalivas, 2000 ). Recently, opiate sensitization was
demonstrated after protracted abstinence from heroin
self-administration (De Vries et al., 1998 ). Interestingly, priming-induced reinstatement of heroin seeking was found only with
opioid and DA ligands that were able to elicit a sensitized locomotor
response in opiate-pretreated animals (De Vries et al., 1999 ;
Vanderschuren et al., 1999 ). These findings are in accord with the
postulated role of the mesolimbic DA system in mediating both the
incentive-motivational and sensitizing properties of opiates and other
drugs of abuse (Robinson and Berridge 1993 ; Vanderschuren and Kalivas,
2000 ).
Repeated exposure to drugs of abuse may also sensitize neuronal systems
involved in stress-responsiveness (Kreek and Koob, 1998 ; Sarnyai et
al., 2001 ). Recent studies indicate that the duration of withdrawal
after heroin self-administration is a critical factor in mediating
footshock stress-induced reinstatement of heroin seeking (Shalev et
al., 2000 ). Thus, stress-induced reinstatement was absent on day 1 of
withdrawal and was greatest after 1-2 weeks of abstinence. Ahmed et
al. (2000) reported that rats that had longer access (11 hr/day) to
heroin exhibit an enhanced sensitivity to the reinstating properties of
footshock than rats that had shorter access (1 hr/day).
These reinstatement results agree with neuroadaptation theories
positing that drugs of abuse induce progressive and long-lasting neuronal changes that depend, at least in part, on the amount of drug
exposure (Pierce and Kalivas 1997 ). The apparent dissociation between
withdrawal severity and vulnerability to opiate relapse further
suggests that drug-enhancing, proponent processes are more likely to
play a role in the persistence of drug craving and relapse than
drug-opposing, opponent processes, which underlie tolerance and withdrawal.
Concluding remarks and future perspectives
As is apparent from the mini-reviews in this issue of the journal,
most studies have focused on psychostimulants, leaving many issues
related to opiate addiction and, in particular, to opiate relapse
unanswered. Although application of a systems approach to the study of
opiate addiction is only just beginning, recent findings challenge
previous notions regarding the role of one particular neurotransmitter
or brain region in the initiation and maintenance of the addiction
process. Rather they indicate that the repeated use of opiates affects
the activity of several neurotransmitter and neuropeptide systems in
brain circuits that regulate mood and affect and that these
neuroadaptations underlie behavioral alterations that define opiate
addiction. It is also apparent that precipitation of relapse by renewed
drug exposure, drug-associated stimuli, and stress is mediated not only
by distinct neuronal pathways, but that the relative contribution
or sensitivity of these pathways to such effects varies as a function
of the duration of withdrawal. When viewed from the perspective of
medications development, these results suggest that the stage of
the addiction cycle must be considered when evaluating the efficacy of
a particular treatment in preventing relapse to opiate addiction. They
further suggest that drugs effective in reducing compulsive opiate
seeking during one stage of the addiction cycle may be ineffective in another and that a multi-targeted approach to the treatment of opiate
addiction is essential.
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FOOTNOTES |
Correspondence should be addressed to T. J. De Vries,
Research Institute Neurosciences Vrije Universiteit, Drug Abuse
Program, Department of Medical Pharmacology, Vrije Universiteit Medical Center, Van der Boechorststraat 7, 1081 BT Amsterdam, The Netherlands. E-mail: tj.de_vries.pharm{at}med.vu.nl.
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