Martin Werme
Karolinska Institutet
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Featured researches published by Martin Werme.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2000
Martin Werme; Peter Thorén; Lars Olson; Stefan Brené
Physical activities such as long‐distance running can be habit forming and associated with a sense of well‐being to a degree that justifies comparison with drug‐induced addictive behaviours. To understand molecular similarities and dissimilarities controlling these behaviours in humans we compared the effects of running in running wheels to the effects of chronic cocaine or morphine administration on mRNA levels in brain reward pathways in the inbred Fischer and Lewis rat strains. These strains are both inbred from the Sprague–Dawley strain; Lewis rats display a higher preference towards addictive drugs and running than do Fischer rats. After chronic cocaine or running a similar increase of dynorphin mRNA in medial caudate putamen was found in the Lewis rat, suggesting common neuronal adaptations in this brain region to both cocaine and running. Fischer and Lewis rats both responded to cocaine with increased dynorphin mRNA levels in medial caudate putamen. However, only Lewis rats increased dynorphin mRNA after running, possibly reflecting the much higher degree of running by the Lewis strain as compared to the Fischer strain. Moreover, the running‐induced upregulation of dynorphin mRNA was blocked by the opioid receptor antagonist naloxone. We suggest that running increases dynorphin mRNA by a mechanism that involves endogenous opioids. The voluntary wheel‐running model in rats might be used to study natural reward and compulsive behaviours and possibly also to screen candidate drugs for treatment of compulsive disorders.
Behavioural Brain Research | 2001
Sara Lindholm; Martin Werme; Stefan Brené; Johan Franck
Abstract Non-selective opioid receptor antagonists are increasingly used in the treatment of alcohol dependence. The clinical effects are significant but the effect size is rather small and unpleasant side effects may limit the benefits of the compounds. Ligands acting at μ- and/or δ- receptors can alter the voluntary intake of ethanol in various animal models. Therefore, the attenuating effects of selective opioid receptor ligands on ethanol intake may be of clinical interest in the treatment of alcoholism. The objective of this study was to examine the effects of a selective κ-receptor agonist, U50,488H on voluntary ethanol intake in the rat. We used a restricted access model with a free choice between an ethanol solution (10% v/v) and water. During the 3-days baseline period, the rats received a daily saline injection (1 ml/kg, i.p.) 15 min before the 2 h access to ethanol. The animals had free access to water at all times. The control group received a daily saline injection during the 4-days treatment-period, whereas the treatment groups received a daily dose of U50,488H (2.5, 5.0 or 10 mg/kg per day). Animals treated with U50,488H dose-dependently decreased their ethanol intake. The effect of the highest dose of U50,488H was reduced by pre-treatment with the selective κ-antagonist nor-binaltorphimine (nor-BNI). These results demonstrate that activation of κ-opioid receptors can attenuate voluntary ethanol intake in the rat, and the data suggest that the brain dynorphin/κ-receptor systems may represent a novel target for pharmacotherapy in the treatment of alcohol dependence.
The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology | 2012
Philippe A. Melas; Maria Rogdaki; Andreas Lennartsson; Karl Björk; Hongshi Qi; Anna Witasp; Martin Werme; Gregers Wegener; Aleksander A. Mathé; Per Svenningsson; Catharina Lavebratt
P11 (S100A10) has been associated with the pathophysiology of depression both in human and rodent models. Different types of antidepressants have been shown to increase P11 levels in distinct brain regions and P11 gene therapy was recently proven effective in reversing depressive-like behaviours in mice. However, the molecular mechanisms that govern P11 gene expression in response to antidepressants still remain elusive. In this study we report decreased levels of P11, associated with higher DNA methylation in the promoter region, in the prefrontal cortex of the Flinders Sensitive Line (FSL) genetic rodent model of depression. This hypermethylated pattern was reversed to normal, as indicated by the control line, after chronic administration of escitalopram (a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; SSRI). The escitalopram-induced hypomethylation was associated with both an increase in P11 gene expression and a reduction in mRNA levels of two DNA methyltransferases that have been shown to maintain DNA methylation in adult forebrain neurons (Dnmt1 and Dnmt3a). In conclusion, our data further support a role for P11 in depression-like states and suggest that this gene is controlled by epigenetic mechanisms that can be affected by antidepressant treatment.
Behavioural Brain Research | 2002
Martin Werme; Sara Lindholm; Peter Thorén; Johan Franck; Stefan Brené
Wheel running performed by rats is reinforcing, rewarding and possibly addictive. In this study we analyzed if wheel running could affect ethanol preference. Lewis rats, known to be both addiction-prone and to develop an excessive wheel running behavior, were given access to ethanol in a two-bottle free-choice paradigm. The animals reached a high and stable ethanol intake after 5 weeks. In the next phase, rats were subjected to ethanol withdrawal for 1, 2 or 4 weeks with or without access to running wheels. Finally animals were again given access to ethanol in the same two-bottle free-choice paradigm, combined with access to running wheels. The rats that ran in running wheels during 1 or 2, but not 4, weeks of ethanol withdrawal increased both ethanol intake and preference as compared with the control group that did not have access to the wheels. Previous studies have demonstrated that low doses of morphine increases ethanol preference. Here we show that also running potentiates ethanol intake and preference. Thus, running which shares many of the reinforcing properties with addictive drugs appears to potentiate rats to an increased preference for ethanol. Our results describe a behavioral interaction where running increases ethanol consumption.
Brain Research | 2000
Martin Werme; Aneta Ringholm; Lars Olson; Stefan Brené
Disturbances of retinoid activated transcription mechanisms have recently been implicated as risk factors for schizophrenia. In this study we have compared the regulation of mRNAs for the nuclear orphan receptor NGFI-B, which forms a functional heterodimer with the retinoid x receptor and the related orphan nuclear receptor Nor1 with c-fos mRNA after acute and chronic treatments with haloperidol and clozapine. The antipsychotic drugs haloperidol and clozapine have different clinical profiles. Haloperidol is a typical neuroleptic giving extrapyramidal side effects (EPS), whereas the atypical compound clozapine does not. Acute haloperidol treatment increased NGFI-B, Nor1 and c-fos mRNAs in nucleus accumbens shell and core as well as medial and lateral caudate putamen. In contrast, clozapine lead to an increase of NGFI-B, Nor1 and c-fos only in the accumbens shell. No haloperidol or clozapine effect on these mRNAs was detected in cingulate, sensory or motor cortex. Chronic haloperidol lead to an increase of NGFI-B mRNA in the accumbens core. Acutely, it is possible that the increased levels of NGFI-B, Nor1 and c-fos mRNA levels in striatum and accumbens might indicate a neural activation which possibly can be used when screening for drugs that do not produce EPS. Also, the increased levels of NGFI-B, which is an important component in retinoid signaling, both after acute and chronic treatments of haloperidol suggests altered sensitivity to retinoids which could be an important component for the beneficial antipsychotic effect.
Molecular Brain Research | 2000
Martin Werme; Lars Olson; Stefan Brené
The two inbred Fischer and Lewis rat strains display differences in acquisition of drug self-administration, suggesting genetic factors controlling the vulnerability to drugs of abuse. In this study, we analyzed the effects of acute and chronic cocaine and morphine on mRNAs encoding the NGFI-B/Nur77 family of nuclear orphan receptors in reward pathways in Fischer and Lewis rats. After a single injection of cocaine, a similar upregulation of NGFI-B mRNA in striatal subregions and cortex cinguli was seen in both Fischer and Lewis rats. In contrast, Nor1 mRNA was only significantly upregulated by cocaine in the Fischer rats. Morphine increased NGFI-B mRNA in medial caudate putamen and cortex cinguli in Lewis rats and Nor1 mRNA in medial caudate putamen in Fischer rats. Chronic cocaine upregulated NGFI-B mRNA in nucleus accumbens core, lateral caudate putamen and cingulate cortex in Fischer rats, whereas no effect was seen in Lewis rats. In contrast, Nor1 mRNA levels were upregulated in Lewis rats in medial caudate putamen and cingulate cortex after chronic cocaine and in cingulate cortex after chronic morphine. No effect on Nor1 mRNA levels was seen in Fischer rats after chronic treatments. Our results demonstrate different responses in addiction-prone Lewis rats as compared to the less addiction-prone Fischer rats with respect to NGFI-B and Nor1 mRNA regulation after acute and repeated administration of cocaine and morphine. Thus, we suggest that the transcription factors NGFI-B and Nor1 might be involved in the control of behaviors such as sensitized locomotor response, craving and aversion that appears after repeated administration of abused drugs.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2003
Martin Werme; Elisabet Hermanson; Andrea Carmine; Silvia Buervenich; Rolf Zetterstrom; Peter Thorén; Sven Ove Ögren; Lars Olson; Thomas Perlmann; Stefan Brené
Nurr1 (Nr4a2) is a transcription factor expressed in dopamine cells from early development and throughout life. Null mutants for Nurr1 lack the ventral midbrain dopamine neurons and die soon after birth. Animals with a heterozygous deletion are viable and display no apparent abnormality. We have investigated the impact of heterozygous deletion of Nurr1 on ethanol consumption in adult mice as a model for drug‐induced reward and on wheel running as a model for natural reward. Interestingly, Nurr1 heterozygous mice never developed high ethanol consumption nor did they develop as much running behaviour as did the wild‐type animals. Thus, Nurr1 appears to have a key role for the reinforcing properties of ethanol and running that underlies the development of excessive reward‐seeking behaviours characteristic for addiction. Quantitative trait loci mapping using C57Bl/6 and DBA/2 mice describe a locus for ethanol preference on chromosome 2, wherein Nurr1 is located. We found two dinucleotide repeats in the Nurr1 promoter that were longer in mice with low preference for ethanol (DBA/2 and 129/Sv) than in mice with high preference for ethanol (C57Bl/6J and C57Bl/6NIH). These sequential data are compatible with Nurr1 as a candidate gene responsible for the quantitative trait loci for ethanol preference on mouse chromosome 2. Together, our data thus imply involvement of Nurr1 in the transition to a state of high ethanol consumption as well as in the development of a high amount of wheel running in mice.
Translational Psychiatry | 2013
Philippe A. Melas; Andreas Lennartsson; H. Vakifahmetoglu-Norberg; Ya Bin Wei; Elin Åberg; Martin Werme; Maria Rogdaki; Mattias Mannervik; Gregers Wegener; S. Brene; Aleksander A. Mathé; Catharina Lavebratt
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) has been implicated in depression, emotional processing and stress response. Part of this evidence originates from human single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) studies. In the present study, we report that a SNP in the rat Npy promoter (C/T; rs105431668) affects in vitro transcription and DNA–protein interactions. Genotyping studies showed that the C-allele of rs105431668 is present in a genetic rat model of depression (Flinders sensitive line; FSL), while the SNP’s T-allele is present in its controls (Flinders resistant line; FRL). In vivo experiments revealed binding of a transcription factor (CREB2) and a histone acetyltransferase (Ep300) only at the SNP locus of the FRL. Accordingly, the FRL had increased hippocampal levels of Npy mRNA and H3K18 acetylation; a gene-activating histone modification maintained by Ep300. Next, based on previous studies showing antidepressant-like effects of physical activity in the FSL, we hypothesized that physical activity may affect Npy’s epigenetic status. In line with this assumption, physical activity was associated with increased levels of Npy mRNA and H3K18 acetylation. Physical activity was also associated with reduced mRNA levels of a histone deacetylase (Hdac5). Conclusively, the rat rs105431668 appears to be a functional Npy SNP that may underlie depression-like characteristics. In addition, the achieved epigenetic reprogramming of Npy provides molecular support for the putative effectiveness of physical activity as a non-pharmacological antidepressant.
Genes & Development | 2006
Maria Bergsland; Martin Werme; Michal Malewicz; Thomas Perlmann; Jonas Muhr
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2002
Martin Werme; Chad Messer; Lars Olson; Lauren Gilden; Peter Thorén; Eric J. Nestler; Stefan Brené