Wed Jul 31, 3:15 PM ET
By Patricia Reaney
LONDON (Reuters) - Feel-good chemicals in the brain,
similar to the active ingredient in cannabis, can wipe out
bad memories, German scientists said in a finding that could
lead to new treatments for anxiety disorders and phobias.
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry in
Munich have shown that natural chemicals in the brain
similar to THC, the active ingredient in marijuana which
produces the high, dampen nerve cell action and wipe out
unpleasant memories.
THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, and similar molecules in
the brain known as cannabinoids bind to the brain's chemical
receptors, and can create a feeling of euphoria.
Cannabis and hashish, which contain THC, have been used
for centuries for medicinal and recreational purposes.
Dr. Beat Lutz and his team created transgenic, or
genetically modified, mice without a cannabinoid receptor.
When they conditioned them to associate a musical tone with
an electric shock, the mice produced a fear reaction, and
continued to react even when the tone was not followed by a
shock, Lutz said.
Normal mice quickly stopped reacting to the tone once it
was not associated with a shock, but the genetically
modified mice without the cannabinoid receptor took much
longer to forget their fear.
Lutz and his team, whose research is published in the
science journal Nature, also showed that blocking the
receptor in normal mice prevented the animals from
forgetting the painful memory.
When the scientists studied an almond shaped area of the
brain called the amygdala, central to storing memory and
fear, in transgenic and normal mice they discovered it was
flooded with natural chemicals, or endocannabinoids, when
the mice were gradually forgetting the learned response to
the shock.
Lutz believes the chemicals help to wipe out the fear or
memory of the unpleasant response by binding to the
cannabinoid receptors, he said on Wednesday.
Smoking cannabis would not produce the same effect in
humans, Lutz said, because it overflows the brain and is not
specific enough to extinguish the unpleasant memory.
Lutz and his team think drugs that target specific
enzymes to boost cannabinoids in the amygdala could help
people suffering from panic attacks and fear-related
memories.
"The finding that the endocannabinoids contribute to
extinction raises the possibility that drugs that target
these molecules and their receptors could be useful new
treatments for anxiety disorders," Pankaj Sah, of the
Australian National University in Canberra, said in a
commentary in Nature.