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News

Cannabis-like drug dims pain without the high

Monday, 24 November 2008
Agence France-Presse
Marijuana leaf

Wonder drug: The complex human cannabinoid system is thought to hold great potential for the control of chronic pain, and could also prove useful in the treatment of anxiety, depression and even obesity.

Credit: iStockphoto

PARIS: Scientists have found a way to unlock the pain-relieving potential of one of the same proteins in the body activated by marijuana, says a new study.

The complex human cannabinoid system is thought to hold great potential for the control of chronic pain, and could also prove useful in the treatment of anxiety, depression and even obesity (see, Marijuana: What science has to say).

In experiments on mice, U.S. researchers have now found a chemical that prevents a naturally occurring enzyme from blocking a pain relieving cannabinoid receptor, called 2-arachidonoylgylcerol (2-AG).

Difficult task

Once the enzyme, known as MAGL, is deactivated, the protein is more effective in dampening pain, say the team, led by Benjamin Cravatt of the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California.

Their research is published in the current issue of the British journal Nature Chemical Biology.

In earlier research, Cravatt and colleagues decoded the chain of chemical reactions that acted on another cannabinoid receptor, AEA, paving the way for the development of pain-relieving medications.

But finding the key for unlocking 2-AG proved more difficult. The tools – selective and efficacious MAGL inhibitors – just weren't there, said Jonathan Long, a graduate student at Scripps and lead author of the study.

The breakthrough came thanks to a new technique for rapidly testing large numbers of chemical compounds – all potential inhibitors – called Activity-Based Protein
Profiling.

Reducing pain

One of the 200 compounds the researchers created was particularly effective in blocking MAGL, and did not appear to interfere with any of several dozen other brain enzymes.

Tests on mice showed that the new molecule – dubbed JLZ184 – increased the concentration of 2-AG in the brain, significantly reducing pain in the lab animals.

The molecule did, however, have at least two drawbacks, highlighted by the complex web of reactions in neurochemical pathways: JLZ184 also caused hypothermia, a lowering of the body temperature; and reduced movement.

These side-effects would have to be managed in any treatments developed for humans, the researchers said.

Readers' comments

Pot makes you look old?

what crack have you been smoking in no way does pot make you look any thing but happy I still can't believe the Total BS that people come up with legalise it Tax the freakin hell out of it and get the world out of this dept that, that the NAZI bush has put the whole world into

Cannabis-like drug dims pain without the high

OR THE GOVERNMENT COULD ALLOW ITS CITIZENS THE FREEDOM TO TAKE A NATURAL INEXPENSIVE SUBSTANCE WITH NO ILL EFFECTS, CANNABIS!!!!!!!
I have a spinal injury and will be in pain for the rest of my life, why does the Government want me hooked on pain killers other than to support the drug industry. Cannabis is non addictive and the dose doesn't vary with usage.
PEACE & LOVE