ΔFosB: a sustained molecular switch for addiction

EJ Nestler, M Barrot, DW Self - Proceedings of the National …, 2001 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001National Acad Sciences
The longevity of some of the behavioral abnormalities that characterize drug addiction has
suggested that regulation of neural gene expression may be involved in the process by
which drugs of abuse cause a state of addiction. Increasing evidence suggests that the
transcription factor ΔFosB represents one mechanism by which drugs of abuse produce
relatively stable changes in the brain that contribute to the addiction phenotype. ΔFosB, a
member of the Fos family of transcription factors, accumulates within a subset of neurons of …
The longevity of some of the behavioral abnormalities that characterize drug addiction has suggested that regulation of neural gene expression may be involved in the process by which drugs of abuse cause a state of addiction. Increasing evidence suggests that the transcription factor ΔFosB represents one mechanism by which drugs of abuse produce relatively stable changes in the brain that contribute to the addiction phenotype. ΔFosB, a member of the Fos family of transcription factors, accumulates within a subset of neurons of the nucleus accumbens and dorsal striatum (brain regions important for addiction) after repeated administration of many kinds of drugs of abuse. Similar accumulation of ΔFosB occurs after compulsive running, which suggests that ΔFosB may accumulate in response to many types of compulsive behaviors. Importantly, ΔFosB persists in neurons for relatively long periods of time because of its extraordinary stability. Therefore, ΔFosB represents a molecular mechanism that could initiate and then sustain changes in gene expression that persist long after drug exposure ceases. Studies in inducible transgenic mice that overexpress either ΔFosB or a dominant negative inhibitor of the protein provide direct evidence that ΔFosB causes increased sensitivity to the behavioral effects of drugs of abuse and, possibly, increased drug seeking behavior. This work supports the view that ΔFosB functions as a type of sustained “molecular switch” that gradually converts acute drug responses into relatively stable adaptations that contribute to the long-term neural and behavioral plasticity that underlies addiction.
National Acad Sciences