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- Cannabis: the brain's other supplier.
- By Rosie Mestel
- New Scientist 31 July 1993
- Reproduced without permission
-
- Three years ago, Israeli archaeologists stumbled upon a 1600-year-old
- tragedy: the remains of a narrow-hipped teenage girl with the skeleton
- of a full-term fetus still cradled in her abdomen. With her were grey
- ashes that contained traces of tetra-hydrocannabinol, the active
- ingredient of marijuana. Could it be that the midwife had
- administered the plant in a last-ditch effort to bring on labour or to
- ease her pain?
-
- Today, in nearby Jerusalem, another chemical is in the news -- this
- one extracted not from ancient ashes but from fresh, pulverised pig
- brain. It is anadamide, a newly christened chemical that might do
- naturally in our heads what marijuana does when we choose to smoke it.
- Anandamide's discovery, along with that of the molecule it binds to in
- the brain, has marijuana researchers buzzing with the best high they
- have had in years. The findings provide new hope for therapies that
- draw on the weed's long list of anecdotal medical uses: as a
- painkiller, appetite stimulant or nausea suppressant, to name a few.
- They also throw open windows onto the mysterious workings of our
- brains.
-
- [History of marijuana research and use]
-
- More recently came other exciting finds: in 1988, Allyn Howlett of St
- Louis University Medical School discovered a specific protein receptor
- for THC in mouse nerve cells -- a protein that only THC and its
- relatives dock onto. Two years later, Tom Bonner's group at the
- National Institute of Mental Health pinpointed the DNA that encodes
- the same receptor in rats. It is now known that humans have the
- receptor, too.
-
- Finding a cannabinoid receptor implies that THC -- unlike alcohol --
- has a quite precise modus operandi that taps into a specific brain
- function. Presumably the drug binds to nerves that have the receptor,
- and the nerves respond in turn by altering their behaviour. The
- classic effects of marijuana smoking are the consequences: changes in
- mood, memory, appetite, movement and perception, including pain.
- Researchers think THC affects so many mental processes because
- receptors are found in many brain regions, especially in those that
- perform tasks known to be disturbed during THC intoxication: in the
- banana-shaped hippocampus, crucial for proper memory; in the crumpled
- cerebral cortex, home of higher thinking; and in the primitive basal
- ganglion, controller of movement.
-
- Once a specially tailored receptor was found, the next step was simple
- - in theory, anyway. "The receptor had to be there for a purpose -
- presumably it didn't evolve so that people could smoke cannabis and
- get high," says Roger Pertwee, a pharmacologist at Aberdeen
- University. Instead, there had to be a natural chemical inside of us
- that fitted onto the receptor and sent some biochemical signal
- cascading through the nerve cell to do who knows what. But plucking
- that one chemical out of a brain stuffed with millions of others was
- never going to be easy.
-
- Several laboratories set to work on the problem and, fittingly,
- Mechoulam's was the first to come up with an answer, in the form of
- a greasy, hairpin-shaped chemical. The researchers dubbed it
- anandamide, from "ananda", the Sanskrit word for bliss. "The guy
- discovers the active ingredient of marijuana back in the 1960s, and
- now, almost 30 years later to the day, he discovers anandamide," says
- Paul Consroe, a neuropharmacologist at the University of Arizona.
- "Isn't that great?"
-
- Mechoulam's strategy was to chase after chemicals that, like THC, are
- soluble in fat. By teasing these substances away from those that are
- water soluble, his group extracted a substance from pig brain that did
- indeed bind to the cannabinoid receptor. But did it act like THC? To
- find out they sent their specimen to Pertwee who had devised a
- sensitive test for cannabinoids that involved monitoring a substance's
- ability to stop muscle-twitching in mouse tissue, when dropped on
- certain nerves. "When it arrived, there was so little of it in the
- phial I couldn't even see it," Pertwee recalls. "We didn't know what
- it was - just that it was a greasy substance." But the tests went
- well: anandamide depressed the twitch just like THC, and last December
- the researchers published their results in "Science".
-
- The mouse result gave Mechoulam and his group the encouragement they
- needed to extract more anandamide from pig brains and then analyse
- and synthesis the chemical in the lab. They also wanted more
- evidence that anadamide docked specifically onto the cannabinoid
- receptor and acted like THC, which has a very different molecular
- structure. And so, with Zvi Vogel and colleagues at the Weizmann
- Institute near Tel Aviv, they came up with a plan. They would add
- the DNA encoding the cannabinoid receptor to hamster or monkey cells
- growing in dishes. The cells equipped with this DNA would then
- produce masses of receptor, which would sit in the cell membrane
- ready and available for any chemical "key" that should happen along.
- Vogel's researchers would add anandamide to the cells and watch what
- happened.
-
- The results, published in July's issue of the "Journal of
- Neurochemistry", were clear: anandamide acted as a key, and a
- precise one at that, sticking only to the cells containing the
- receptor, and not to others. What's more, when anandamide stuck to
- the cells, it triggered biochemical changes similar to those
- associated with THC and related chemicals. Not only did anandamide
- fit the same lock as THC, but it appeared to open similar doors in
- the brain.
-
- More tests followed in a number of laboratories, and those researchers
- found that in every way that has been tested so far, anandamide acts
- very much like THC. But why would we want such a mind-altering
- substance in our brains?
-
- Studies on another class of drugs provide a useful parallel.
- Opiates such as morphine and heroin act upon the body's nervous
- system to cause euphoria and block pain. In 1973, natural opioids,
- which behave in the same way as opiates, but have a different
- structure, were pulled out of the body. It appears that when the
- body is under serious assault, nerve cells spit out these opioids,
- which promptly bind to other nerve cells to stop pain signals dead in
- their tracks. At the same time, they fasten onto sites in the brain
- to induce a feeling of wellbeing.
-
- Anandamide, like the natural opioids, will probably have its own
- specific set of jobs to perform in the brain and body. The effects
- of THC give a rough guide to what these might be: involvement in
- mood, memory and pain are obvious examples.
-
- But what would the brain be like without anandamide? Researchers
- intend to find out. Bonner is gearing up to produce a genetically
- engineered mouse that has no cannabinoid receptors: no receptors, no
- anandamide function. Others want to tinker with anandamide to make a
- version that binds to the receptor but doesn't trigger any change in
- the nerve's behaviour. Added to a mouse, it would stop the body's
- real, internal anandamide from doing its job. Researchers are also
- excited by anandamide's possible role in mental and neurological
- disease. There are also other questions to be asked. If anandamide,
- like THC, hampers memory, could a drug with the opposite effects - a
- "memory pill" - be made? "It's all speculation for now," says Steven
- Childers, a pharmacologist at Bowman Gray School of Medicine, North
- Carolina, "but we like to think about these things."
-
- It will take more time before anandamide is firmly established as the
- bona fide partner to the cannabinoid receptor. Meanwhile, Mechoulam's
- lab has two other anandamide-like chemicals waiting in the wings. And
- in the US, Howlett and Childers both have chemicals of an entirely
- different kind that bind to the receptor: they are water soluble, not
- fat soluble. The importance of each remains to be seen.
-
- Whatever anandamide turns out to be, it provides pharmacologists with
- a fresh plan of attack in their hunt for drugs that act like the
- cannabinoids. Such drugs could be valuable to help keep at bay the
- nausea of cancer chemotherapy; to stimulate appetite in AIDS patients;
- to dampen tremors in neurological disorders; to reduce eye pressure in
- patients with glaucoma; and to dull pain in those for whom other
- painkillers do not work.
-
- Cannabinoids can do at least some of these things, with one small
- drawback: they also make the recipient high. The holy grail of
- cannabinoid therapeutics has been to separate what causes the high
- from the source of the desired effects, by chemical tinkering with THC
- or its relations - shortening a side group on one part of the
- molecule, lengthening a carbon chain in another - in the hope that
- the "undesirable" effects will be lost in the reshuffle. Despite the
- drug's dubious reputation, several US pharmaceuticals spent several
- years trying to make this work, but without success. Nor did they
- reach another equally sought after goal: an antagonist that will block
- the effects of THC and similar substances when taken.
-
- Until marijuana researchers succeed in doing something along these
- lines, it is unlikely that drugs companies will pay much attention.
- "There is a real stigma with working with drugs of abuse," says Billy
- Martin, a pharmacologist at the Medical College of Virginia. "If drugs
- companies had three choices of classes of drugs to work on and one was
- a drug of abuse, they're just not going to work on the drug of abuse."
- This view is shared by Larry Melvin, who worked on the Pfizer
- pharmaceuticals company's now defunct cannabinoid therapeutics
- programme. "What will ultimately legitimise the field in a big way is
- if researchers can come up with a really good therapeutic ability.
- Then you'll see the companies turn around."
-
- But Gabriel Nahas, an anaesthetist from Columbia University in New
- York, who has spoken out against marijuana use for many years,
- maintains that THC's effects on the brain are too general and too
- toxic for this route ever to work. The discovery of anandamide and
- its receptor have not changed his mind. "The brain is a computer," he
- says. "To put THC in the brain is akin to putting a bug in the
- computer. I'm sticking to my guns about its harmful effects - not
- only to man but to society."
-
- Only time will reveal the value of anandamide and its receptor to drug
- therapy. But the importance of these discoveries to brain research is
- not in doubt. "We're no longer just dealing with the pharmacology of
- a recreational drug," says Pertwee. "We're dealing with the
- physiology of a newly discovered system in the brain. And that's an
- enormously bigger field."
-