Opioid neuropeptide genotypes in relation to heroin abuse: Dopamine tone contributes to reversed mesolimbic proenkephalin expression
- Andrej Nikoshkov*,
- Katarina Drakenberg*,
- Xinyu Wang*,
- Monika Cs. Horvath†,
- Eva Keller†, and
- Yasmin L. Hurd*,‡,§
- *Section of Psychiatry, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, S-171 76 Stockholm, Sweden;
- †Department of Forensic Medicine, Semmelweis University, HU 1091, Budapest, Hungary; and
- ‡Department of Psychiatry and Pharmacology and Systems Therapeutics, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, One Gustave L. Levy Place, New York, NY 10029
-
Communicated by Tomas Hökfelt, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, November 20, 2007 (received for review August 31, 2007)
Abstract
Striatal enkephalin and dynorphin opioid systems mediate reward and negative affect, respectively, relevant to addiction disorders. We examined polymorphisms of proenkephalin (PENK) and prodynorphin (PDYN) genes in relation to heroin abuse and gene expression in the human striatum and the relevance of genetic dopaminergic tone, critical for drug reward and striatal function. Heroin abuse was significantly associated with PENK polymorphic 3′ UTR dinucleotide (CA) repeats; 79% of subjects homozygous for the 79-bp allele were heroin abusers. Such individuals tended to express higher PENK mRNA than the 81-bp homozygotes, but PENK levels within the nucleus accumbens (NAc) shell were most strongly correlated to catecholamine-O-methyltransferase (COMT) genotype. Control Met/Met individuals expressed lower PENK mRNA than Val carriers, a pattern reversed in heroin users. Up-regulation of NAc PENK in Met/Met heroin abusers was accompanied by impaired tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) mRNA expression in mesolimbic dopamine neurons. In contrast to PENK, no association was detected between PDYN genotype (68-bp repeat element containing one to four copies of AP-1 binding sites in the promoter region) and heroin abuse, although there was a clear functional association with striatal PDYN mRNA expression: an increased number of inducible repeats (three and four) correlated with higher PDYN levels than adult or fetal subjects with noninducible (one and two) alleles. Moreover, PDYN expression was not related to COMT genotype. Altogether, the data suggest that dysfunction of the opioid reward system is significantly linked to opiate abuse vulnerability and that heroin use alters the apparent influence of heritable dopamine tone on mesolimbic PENK and TH function.
Footnotes
- §To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: yasmin.hurd{at}mssm.edu
-
Author contributions: E.K. and Y.L.H. designed research; A.N., K.D., X.W., M.C.H., and E.K. performed research; A.N., K.D., X.W., M.C.H., and Y.L.H. analyzed data; and A.N. and Y.L.H. wrote the paper.
-
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
-
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0710902105/DC1.
- © 2008 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA





