Abused drugs-induce long-term behavioral disorders that are thought to be maintained by biological mechanisms in the central nervous system that are largely unknown. Work in this group during previous FYs has developed approaches to identify such genes and documented candidate genes whose expression are regulated by abused drugs, including amphetamine, cocaine and morphine. Several genes that can be readily identified as possible participants in neuronal signalling have been identified. These genes include that encoding a novel G protein beta subunit, a gene encoding a major regulated brain phosphoprotein phosphatase, calcineurin, and a gene encoding a novel G-protein-linked receptor. Functional implications of G-beta expression were sought using sense and antisense overexpression in neuroblastoma cells, and in vivo following intraventricular injection into experimental animals. Initial results reveal effects on neural process outgrowth in vitro and on cocaine-induced sensitization in vivo that are consistent with interesting possible roles for this G protein in the neuroadaptations that result from abused drug administration.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Intramural Research (Z01)
Project #
1Z01DA000157-01
Application #
5201665
Study Section
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1995
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
National Institute on Drug Abuse
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
State
Country
United States
Zip Code
Ishiguro, Hiroki; Liu, Qing-Rong; Gong, Jian-Ping et al. (2006) NrCAM in addiction vulnerability: positional cloning, drug-regulation, haplotype-specific expression, and altered drug reward in knockout mice. Neuropsychopharmacology 31:572-84
Liu, Qing-Rong; Gong, Jian-Ping; Uhl, George R (2005) Families of protein phosphatase 1 modulators activated by protein kinases a and C: focus on brain. Prog Nucleic Acid Res Mol Biol 79:371-404
Gong, J-P; Liu, Q-R; Zhang, P-W et al. (2005) Mouse brain localization of the protein kinase C-enhanced phosphatase 1 inhibitor KEPI (kinase C-enhanced PP1 inhibitor). Neuroscience 132:713-27
Liu, Qing-Rong; Zhang, Ping-Wu; Lin, Zhicheng et al. (2004) GBPI, a novel gastrointestinal- and brain-specific PP1-inhibitory protein, is activated by PKC and inactivated by PKA. Biochem J 377:171-81
Sokolov, Boris P; Polesskaya, Oxana O; Uhl, George R (2003) Mouse brain gene expression changes after acute and chronic amphetamine. J Neurochem 84:244-52
Kitanaka, Nobue; Kitanaka, Junichi; Walther, Donna et al. (2003) Comparative inter-strain sequence analysis of the putative regulatory region of murine psychostimulant-regulated gene GNB1 (G protein beta 1 subunit gene). DNA Seq 14:257-63
Kitanaka, Junichi; Kitanaka, Nobue; Takemura, Motohiko et al. (2002) Isolation and sequencing of a putative promoter region of the murine G protein beta 1 subunit (GNB1) gene. DNA Seq 13:39-45
Liu, Qing-Rong; Zhang, Ping-Wu; Zhen, Qiaoxi et al. (2002) KEPI, a PKC-dependent protein phosphatase 1 inhibitor regulated by morphine. J Biol Chem 277:13312-20