Pubdate: 4 Mar 1999 Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer (WA) Copyright: 1999 Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Contact: http://www.seattle-pi.com/ Author: Alex Dominguez, The Associated Press BRAIN CHEMICAL DOPAMINE MAY NOT BE ADDICTION KEY Dopamine may not be the brain's "feel-good" chemical after all, a study found, suggesting that scientists trying to unlock the secrets of drug addiction may have been off-target for the past two decades. The naturally produced brain chemical, rather than being the key player in the pleasure process, is only a messenger and one of several factors, according to the study, published today in the journal Nature. "It certainly says the picture is much more complicated than being just dopamine alone, and it will lead to the search for other chemical substances in the brain," said the study's author, chemist R. Mark Wightman of the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. Dopamine, first discovered in 1957, came into prominence in the early 1960s when scientists discovered that several antipsychotic drugs targeted it. In the late 1970s, researchers began looking into its role in drug addiction and found that cocaine, heroin and other addictive drugs increase levels of dopamine in the body. Since then, some scientists have tried to develop a medication that would cure cocaine addiction by blocking dopamine. The latest study is another that casts doubt on that approach. The researchers attached electrodes to the brains of rats, which produced dopamine when they were shocked. The rats were then trained to shock themselves. As the rats continued to shock themselves, however, the researchers discovered that the amount of dopamine produced by their brains decreased - -- even though they continued to seek pleasure by pressing the lever that electrically stimulated their brains. Dopamine appears to be related to "novelty, predictability or some other aspect of the reward process, rather than to hedonism itself," the researchers reported. What chemical or process is ultimately responsible for the pleasure is "not really clear right now. That's something that's a real topic of investigation," said Anthony Grace, a professor of neuroscience and psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh who was not involved in the study. Grace said that even if dopamine is not the ultimate reward for the brain, it might still be the key to curing addiction. Some researchers now complain that dopamine's activity in the brain has been overstated. Alan Leshner, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, has criticized what he called "the dopamine religion" among some scientists. Marc Caron, a professor of cell biology at the Duke University Medical Center, found evidence last year that the effects of cocaine are not solely controlled by dopamine. Caron created specially bred mice without dopamine transporters, and found they still wanted cocaine. Medications that block the transporters in humans, however, might be effective if they could block the desire for cocaine long enough to break the addiction, Grace said. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski