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      The role of the cannabinoid system in fear memory and extinction in male and female mice

      , , ,
      Psychoneuroendocrinology
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="d2867275e91">The prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is higher in women than in men. Among both humans and mice, females exhibit higher resistance to fear extinction than males, suggesting that differences between sexes in fear-extinction processes are involved in the pathophysiology of such fear-related diseases. Sex differences in molecular mechanisms underlying fear memory and extinction are unclear. The cannabinoid (CB) system is well known to be involved in fear memory and extinction, but this involvement is based mainly on experiments using male rodents. It is not known whether there are sex differences in the role of the CB system in fear memory and extinction. To explore this possibility, we investigated the effects of pharmacological manipulations of the CB system on the retrieval and extinction of contextual fear memory in male and female mice. WIN55,212-2, a CB receptor (CBR) agonist, augmented the retrieval of fear memory in both sexes, but SR141716 (a CB1R antagonist) did not affect it in either sex. An enhancement of 2-arachidonylglycerol (2-AG, one of the two major endocannabinoids) via JZL184 (an inhibitor of the 2-AG hydrolase monoacylglycerol lipase [MAGL]), augmented the retrieval of fear memory through the activation of CB1R but not CB2R in female mice. In contrast, the enhancement of N-arachidonylethanolamine (AEA, the other major endocannabinoid) via URB597, an inhibitor of an AEA hydrolase (fatty acid amide hydrolase-1) did not show any effects on the retrieval of fear memory in either sex. WIN55,212-2, SR141716, and JZL184 inhibited fear extinction irrespective of sex. URB enhanced fear extinction in females that were in diestrus phase at the first extinction session, but not in males. These results suggest that although the role of CB1R in the retrieval and extinction of contextual fear memory is common among males and females, the effects of an increase in endocannabinoid levels on the retrieval or extinction of contextual fear memory differ between the sexes. </p>

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          Most cited references55

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          The endogenous cannabinoid system controls extinction of aversive memories.

          Acquisition and storage of aversive memories is one of the basic principles of central nervous systems throughout the animal kingdom. In the absence of reinforcement, the resulting behavioural response will gradually diminish to be finally extinct. Despite the importance of extinction, its cellular mechanisms are largely unknown. The cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1) and endocannabinoids are present in memory-related brain areas and modulate memory. Here we show that the endogenous cannabinoid system has a central function in extinction of aversive memories. CB1-deficient mice showed strongly impaired short-term and long-term extinction in auditory fear-conditioning tests, with unaffected memory acquisition and consolidation. Treatment of wild-type mice with the CB1 antagonist SR141716A mimicked the phenotype of CB1-deficient mice, revealing that CB1 is required at the moment of memory extinction. Consistently, tone presentation during extinction trials resulted in elevated levels of endocannabinoids in the basolateral amygdala complex, a region known to control extinction of aversive memories. In the basolateral amygdala, endocannabinoids and CB1 were crucially involved in long-term depression of GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)-mediated inhibitory currents. We propose that endocannabinoids facilitate extinction of aversive memories through their selective inhibitory effects on local inhibitory networks in the amygdala.
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            Expression of central and peripheral cannabinoid receptors in human immune tissues and leukocyte subpopulations.

            Two proteins with seven transmembrane-spanning domains typical of guanosine-nucleotide-binding-protein-coupled receptors have been identified as cannabinoid receptors; the central cannabinoid receptor, CB1, and the peripheral cannabinoid receptor, CB2, initially described in rat brain and spleen, respectively. Here, we report the distribution patterns for both CB1 and CB2 transcripts in human immune cells and in several human tissues, as analysed using a highly sensitive and quantitative PCR-based method. CB1 was mainly expressed in the central nervous system and, to a lower extent, in several peripheral tissues such as adrenal gland, heart, lung, prostate, uterus, ovary, testis, bone marrow, thymus and tonsils. In contrast, the CB2 gene, which is not expressed in the brain, was particularly abundant in immune tissues, with an expression level 10-100-fold higher than that of CB1. Although CB2 mRNA was also detected in some other peripheral tissues, its level remained very low. In spleen and tonsils, the CB2 mRNA content was equivalent to that of CB1 mRNA in the central nervous system. Among the main human blood cell subpopulations, the distribution pattern of the CB2 mRNA displayed important variations. The rank order of CB2 mRNA levels in these cells was B-cells > natural killer cells > monocytes > polymorphonuclear neutrophil cells > T8 cells > T4 cells. The same rank order was also established in human cell lines belonging to the myeloid, monocytic and lymphoid lineages. The prevailing expression of the CB2 gene in immune tissues was confirmed by Northern-blot analysis. In addition, the expression of the CB2 protein was demonstrated by an immunohistological analysis performed on tonsil sections using specific anti-(human CB2) IgG; this experiment showed that CB2 expression was restricted to B-lymphocyte-enriched areas of the mantle of secondary lymphoid follicles. These results suggest that (a) CB1 and CB2 can be considered as tissue-selective antigens of the central nervous system and immune system, respectively, and (b) cannabinoids may exert specific receptor-mediated actions on the immune system through the CB2 receptor.
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              Molecular characterization of an enzyme that degrades neuromodulatory fatty-acid amides.

              Endogenous neuromodulatory molecules are commonly coupled to specific metabolic enzymes to ensure rapid signal inactivation. Thus, acetylcholine is hydrolysed by acetylcholine esterase and tryptamine neurotransmitters like serotonin are degraded by monoamine oxidases. Previously, we reported the structure and sleep-inducing properties of cis-9-octadecenamide, a lipid isolated from the cerebrospinal fluid of sleep-deprived cats. cis-9-Octadecenamide, or oleamide, has since been shown to affect serotonergic systems and block gap-junction communication in glial cells (our unpublished results). We also identified a membrane-bound enzyme activity that hydrolyses oleamide to its inactive acid, oleic acid. We now report the mechanism-based isolation, cloning and expression of this enzyme activity, originally named oleamide hydrolase, from rat liver plasma membranes. We also show that oleamide hydrolase converts anandamide, a fatty-acid amide identified as the endogenous ligand for the cannabinoid receptor, to arachidonic acid, indicating that oleamide hydrolase may serve as the general inactivating enzyme for a growing family of bioactive signalling molecules, the fatty-acid amides. Therefore we will hereafter refer to oleamide hydrolase as fatty-acid amide hydrolase, in recognition of the plurality of fatty-acid amides that the enzyme can accept as substrates.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Psychoneuroendocrinology
                Psychoneuroendocrinology
                Elsevier BV
                03064530
                April 2022
                April 2022
                : 138
                : 105688
                Article
                10.1016/j.psyneuen.2022.105688
                35176534
                beec7a02-c774-438e-a027-35cde6ad9928
                © 2022

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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