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Striatal dopamine D1-type receptor availability: no difference from control but association with cortical thickness in methamphetamine users

Authors :
Okita, K
Morales, A M
Dean, A C
Johnson, M C
Lu, V
Farahi, J
Mandelkern, M A
London, E D
Source :
Molecular Psychiatry; May 2018, Vol. 23 Issue: 5 p1320-1327, 8p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Chronic methamphetamine use poses potentially devastating consequences for directly affected individuals and for society. Lower dopamine D2-type receptor availability has been observed in striata of methamphetamine users as compared with controls, but an analogous comparison of D1-type receptors has been conducted only on post-mortem material, with no differences in methamphetamine users from controls in the caudate nucleus and putamen and higher D1-receptor density in the nucleus accumbens. Released from neurons when methamphetamine is self-administered, dopamine binds to both D1- and D2-type receptors in the striatum, with downstream effects on cortical activity. Thus, both receptor subtypes may contribute to methamphetamine-induced alterations in cortical morphology and behavior. In this study, 21 methamphetamine-dependent subjects and 23 healthy controls participated in positron emission tomography and structural magnetic resonance imaging for assessment of striatal D1- and D2-type receptor availability and cortical gray-matter thickness, respectively. Although D2-type receptor availability (BPnd) was lower in the methamphetamine group, as shown previously, the groups did not differ in D1-type BPnd. In the methamphetamine group, mean cortical gray-matter thickness was negatively associated with cumulative methamphetamine use and craving for the drug. Striatal D1-type but not D2-type BPnd was negatively associated with global mean cortical gray-matter thickness in the methamphetamine group, but no association was found between gray-matter thickness and BPnd for either dopamine receptor subtype in the control group. These results suggest a role of striatal D1-type receptors in cortical adaptation to chronic methamphetamine use.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13594184 and 14765578
Volume :
23
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Molecular Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs45523781
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/mp.2017.172