Neuron
Volume 109, Issue 9, 5 May 2021, Pages 1513-1526.e11
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Article
Subcellular specificity of cannabinoid effects in striatonigral circuits

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2021.03.007Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Cannabinoids induce catalepsy and antinociception via striatonigral CB1 receptors

  • Substance P regulation by plasma membrane CB1 mediates antinociception

  • Mitochondrial CB1 activity decreases synaptic transmission and induces catalepsy

  • Subcellular location of CB1 receptors biases cannabinoid effects on behavior

Summary

Recent advances in neuroscience have positioned brain circuits as key units in controlling behavior, implying that their positive or negative modulation necessarily leads to specific behavioral outcomes. However, emerging evidence suggests that the activation or inhibition of specific brain circuits can actually produce multimodal behavioral outcomes. This study shows that activation of a receptor at different subcellular locations in the same neuronal circuit can determine distinct behaviors. Pharmacological activation of type 1 cannabinoid (CB1) receptors in the striatonigral circuit elicits both antinociception and catalepsy in mice. The decrease in nociception depends on the activation of plasma membrane-residing CB1 receptors (pmCB1), leading to the inhibition of cytosolic PKA activity and substance P release. By contrast, mitochondrial-associated CB1 receptors (mtCB1) located at the same terminals mediate cannabinoid-induced catalepsy through the decrease in intra-mitochondrial PKA-dependent cellular respiration and synaptic transmission. Thus, subcellular-specific CB1 receptor signaling within striatonigral circuits determines multimodal control of behavior.

Keywords

CB1 receptor
catalepsy
antinociception
THC
mitochondria
substantia nigra
PKA
substance P

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