Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology
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Neuropsychopharmacology · May 2003
Comparative StudyDownregulation of neuronal cdk5/p35 in opioid addicts and opiate-treated rats: relation to neurofilament phosphorylation.
Neuronal cyclin-dependent kinase-5 (Cdk5) and its neuron-specific activator p35 play a major role in regulating the cytoskeleton dynamics. Since opioid addiction was associated with hyperphosphorylation of neurofilament (NF) in postmortem human brains, this study was undertaken to assess the status of the cdk5/p35 complex and its relation with NF-H phosphorylation in brains of chronic opioid abusers. Decreased immunodensities of cdk5 (18%) and p35 (26-44%) were found in the prefrontal cortex of opioid addicts compared with matched controls. ⋯ In these brains, phosphorylated NF-H significantly correlated with p35 (r=0.58) but not with cdk5 (r=0.03). The results suggest that opiate addiction is associated with downregulation of cdk5/p35 levels in the brain. This downregulation and the aberrant hyperphosphorylation of NF-H proteins might have important consequences in the development of neural plasticity associated with opiate addiction in humans.