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ScienceDaily (Nov. 7, 2007) — American and Italian researchers have found
that boosting the amounts of a marijuana-like brain transmitter called anandamide
produces antidepressant effects in test rats.
Led by Daniele Piomelli, the Louise Turner Arnold Chair in Neurosciences and
director of the Center for Drug Discovery at the University of California, Irvine,
the researchers used a drug they created, called URB597, which blocks anandamide
degradation in the brain, thereby increasing the levels of this chemical.
“These findings raise the hope that the mood-elevating properties of
marijuana can be harnessed to treat depression,” Piomelli said. “Marijuana
itself has shown no clinical use for depression. However, specific drugs that
amplify the actions of natural marijuana-like transmitters in the brain are
showing great promise.”
The researchers administered URB597 to chronically stressed rats which showed
behaviors similar to those seen in depressed human patients. After five weeks
of treatment, the stressed rats treated with the drug were behaving similarly
to a comparison group of unstressed animals.
URB597 works by inhibiting FAAH, an enzyme in the body that breaks down anandamide.
Dubbed “the bliss molecule” for its similarities to the active ingredient
in marijuana, anandamide is a neurotransmitter that is part of the brain’s
endocannabinoid system and it has been shown in studies by Piomelli and others
to play analgesic, anti-anxiety and antidepressant roles. It also is involved
in regulating feeding and obesity. Blocking FAAH activity boosts the effects
of anandamide without producing the “high” seen with marijuana.
Piomelli and colleagues at the Universities of Urbino and Parma in Italy created
URB597. A patent was issued in 2007. The European pharmaceutical company Organon
holds the license to the patent and will begin clinical studies on the drug
in 2008, according to Piomelli.
Marco Bortolato, Regina Mangieri, Jin Fu, Janet Kim and Oliver Arguello of
UC Irvine; Andrea Duranti, Andrea Tontini and Giorgio Tarzia of the University
of Urbino; and Marco Mor of the University of Parma also participated in the
study. It was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the University
of California Discovery Program and the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia
and Depression.
The study appears in the Nov. 15 issue of Biological Psychiatry.
Adapted from materials provided by University of California - Irvine. http://www.sciencedaily.com |