4.7 Article

Repeated N-Acetyl Cysteine Reduces Cocaine Seeking in Rodents and Craving in Cocaine-Dependent Humans

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 871-878

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/npp.2010.226

Keywords

N-acetyl cysteine; cocaine; drug abuse; craving; reinstatement; cystine-glutamate exchange

Funding

  1. MCW GCRC [RR00058]
  2. Promentis Pharmaceuticals
  3. Ortho-McNeil Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC
  4. [DA017328]
  5. [DA025617]
  6. [DA015758]
  7. [DA010214]
  8. [DA00486]
  9. [DA09465]
  10. [DA019754]

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Addiction is a chronic relapsing disorder hypothesized to be produced by drug-induced plasticity that renders individuals vulnerable to craving-inducing stimuli such as re-exposure to the drug of abuse. Drug-induced plasticity that may result in the addiction phenotype includes increased excitatory signaling within corticostriatal pathways that correlates with craving in humans and is necessary for reinstatement in rodents. Reduced cystine-glutamate exchange by system x(c)-appears to contribute to heightened excitatory signaling within the striatum, thereby posing this as a novel target in the treatment of addiction. In the present report, we examined the impact of repeated N-acetyl cysteine, which is commonly used to activate cystine-glutamate exchange, on reinstatement in rodents in a preclinical study and on craving in cocaine-dependent humans in a preliminary, proof-of-concept clinical experiment. Interestingly, repeated administration (7 days) of N-acetyl cysteine (60 mg/kg, IP) produced a significant reduction in cocaine (10 mg/kg, IP)-induced reinstatement, even though rats (N = 10-12/group) were tested 24 h after the last administration of N-acetyl cysteine. The reduction in behavior despite the absence of the N-acetyl cysteine indicates that repeated N-acetyl cysteine may have altered drug-induced plasticity that underlies drug-seeking behavior. In parallel, our preliminary clinical data indicate that repeated administration (4 days) of N-acetyl cysteine (1200-2400 mg/day) to cocaine-dependent human subjects (N 4 per group) produced a significant reduction in craving following an experimenter-delivered IV injection of cocaine (20 mg/70 kg/60 s). Collectively, these data demonstrate that N-acetyl cysteine diminishes the motivational qualities of a cocaine challenge injection possibly by altering pathogenic drug-induced plasticity. Neuropsychopharmacology (2011) 36, 871-878; doi:10.1038/npp.2010.226; published online 15 December 2010

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