학술논문

Persistent sexually dimorphic effects of adolescent THC exposure on hippocampal synaptic plasticity and episodic memory in rodents
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurodegenerative
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Estrogen
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Substance Misuse
Women's Health
Cannabinoid Research
Pediatric
Neurosciences
Endocannabinoid System Research
Behavioral and Social Science
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Animals
Dronabinol
Female
Hippocampus
Long-Term Potentiation
Male
Memory
Episodic
Mice
Neuronal Plasticity
Rats
Rodentia
Synaptic Transmission
THC
hippocampus
CA1
Lateral perforant path
Cannabinoid
Spatial learning
Long-term potentiation
Frequency facilitation
Sex differences
Clinical Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Biochemistry and cell biology
Language
Abstract
There is evidence that cannabis use during adolescence leads to memory and cognitive problems in young adulthood but little is known about effects of early life cannabis exposure on synaptic operations that are critical for encoding and organizing information. We report here that a 14-day course of daily Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol treatments administered to adolescent rats and mice (aTHC) leads to profound but selective deficits in synaptic plasticity in two axonal systems in female, and to lesser extent male, hippocampus as assessed in adulthood. Adolescent-THC exposure did not alter basic synaptic transmission (input/output curves) and had only modest effects on frequency facilitation. Nevertheless, aTHC severely impaired the endocannabinoid-dependent long-term potentiation in the lateral perforant path in females of both species, and in male mice; this was reliably associated with impaired acquisition of a component of episodic memory that depends on lateral perforant path function. Potentiation in the Schaffer-commissural (S-C) projection to field CA1 was disrupted by aTHC treatment in females only and this was associated with both a deficit in estrogen effects on S-C synaptic responses and impairments to CA1-dependent spatial (object location) memory. In all the results demonstrate sexually dimorphic and projection system-specific effects of aTHC exposure that could underlie discrete effects of early life cannabinoid usage on adult cognitive function. Moreover they suggest that some of the enduring, sexually dimorphic effects of cannabis use reflect changes in synaptic estrogen action.