Pubdate: Sat, 21 Aug 1999 Source: New Scientist (UK) Copyright: New Scientist, RBI Limited 1999 Contact: http://www.newscientist.com/ Author: Nell Boyce DO CLOCK GENES MAKE ADDICTION TICK? A SURPRISE finding in fruit flies suggests that biological clocks may be involved in cocaine addiction. Last year, Jay Hirsh and his colleagues at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville discovered that fruit flies respond to crack cocaine smoke by grooming and walking in circles. Repeated exposure to the drug made the flies respond more dramatically to the same doses, the same kind of "sensitisation" found in humans. This kind of reaction is peculiar to drugs like cocaine. Now Hirsh's graduate student Rozi Andretic has found that flies with broken clocks fail to become sensitised. The researchers report in the current issue of Science (vol 285, p 1066) that flies missing any one of four biological clock genes have a constant response to cocaine despite repeated exposures. "This is not something that anyone would have predicted," says Hirsh. "We still find it somewhat surprising." Hirsh notes that people with certain psychiatric problems such as bipolar disorder develop irregular sleep patterns and are more likely to abuse drugs. He speculates that defects in clock genes could explain the connection. "This opens the possibility that there could be some linkages between these biological phenomena," he says. Other circadian rhythm researchers were surprised by the finding but weren't sure where it would lead. Michael Rosbash at Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts, for example, points out that this is the first time the clock genes have been implicated in anything other than regulating clocks. "The question is what does it mean," he says. "Only time will tell." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck