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ΔFosB is a critical component in relapse and reinstatement to substance use disorders that is highly expressed after repeated chronic administration of drugs of abuse, targetting glutamate release, spine density, transcriptional factors, and epigenetic mechanisms.
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Modulation of ΔFosB’s targets and upstream pathways might be a strategy to prevent relapse.
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Evidence suggests that N-acetylcysteine can potentially help reduce drug use relapse and craving. Here, we explored potential mechanisms through which N-acetylcysteine impacts dendritic arborisation, synaptic plasticity, transcriptional downstream targets, and epigenetics. These mechanisms may provide a possible link to ΔFosB-related signalling in drug use relapse and craving.
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N-acetylcysteine influences glutamatergic and dopaminergic neurotransmission and modulates downstream signalling transcription factors and pathways altered by ΔFosB, making it a promising treatment option for preventing relapse in substance use.
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N-acetylcysteine’s safety profile, tolerability, and accessibility give this compound a significant advantage for use in this context, particularly since patients with substance use disorders are prone to the risk of overdose.
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Further extensive and robust preclinical and clinical research is needed to confirm the efficacy of N-acetylcysteine and to uncover the underpinning mechanisms behind its effects.
A glance at the reward system in substance use disorders
Although different drugs of abuse act on distinct neurotransmitter systems of the brain and engender various psychoactive effects, all of them converge on the brain’s reward system (Nestler, Reference Nestler2005). Preclinical studies on substances abused by humans have provided us with better insights into addiction’s cellular and molecular pathways (Lynch et al., Reference Lynch, Nicholson, Dance, Morgan and Foley2010). Studies on experimental animals have shown that both acute and chronic drug self-administration dramatically enhance the firing of the dopaminergic neurons of the ventral tegmental area (VTA) of the midbrain, an area with reciprocal projections to and from the mesocortical and mesolimbic pathways, including the nucleus accumbens (NAc) of the limbic forebrain, amygdala, cingulate gyrus, basal ganglia, and prefrontal cortex (PFC) (Nestler, Reference Nestler2005; Willuhn et al., Reference Willuhn, Wanat, Clark and Phillips2010; Volkow and Morales, Reference Volkow and Morales2015).
All drugs of abuse are potentially rewarding. The NAc, amygdala (particularly the basolateral amygdala), ventromedial prefrontal cortex (including the orbitofrontal cortex), and posterior cingulate cortex are among the cortical and subcortical areas involved in the valuation and reward process. These areas evaluate the value, history, and cost of a reward and whether a rewarding activity needs to be repeated (Nestler, Reference Nestler2005; Wassum and Izquierdo, Reference Wassum and Izquierdo2015; Loganathan and Ho, Reference Loganathan and Ho2021). Increased VTA’s dopaminergic signalling will cause a sudden rise in the cyclic AMP (cAMP) and Ca2+ concentration in the NAc, following the activation of D1 receptors and, therefore, activate adenylyl cyclase (Muschamp and Carlezon, Reference Muschamp and Carlezon2013). All these events subsequently lead to the activation of the cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB) through the phosphorylation of Ser133 (Muschamp and Carlezon, Reference Muschamp and Carlezon2013).
CREB is a transcription factor that can either enhance or repress the expression of several genes. Phosphorylation of CREB at Ser133 results in the increased expression of dynorphin, which occupies kappa opioid receptors located on the VTA neurons and hampers the dopamine signalling of the mesocorticolimbic pathway of the reward circuitry. Thus, tolerance and dependence instigate, causing patients with substance use disorders to use more of a substance (Nestler, Reference Nestler2005; Muschamp and Carlezon, Reference Muschamp and Carlezon2013).
On the other side, with chronic use of addictive substances, several structural modifications and many cellular adaptations will occur (Robinson and Kolb, Reference Robinson and Kolb1997; Spiga et al., Reference Spiga, Mulas, Piras and Diana2014; Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Huang, Lu, Liu, Tu, Zhu, Ying, Zhao, Liu, Guo, Zhang and Zhang2017). Dopamine signalling of the VTA–NAc pathway also produces another protein named ΔFosB, which leads to the activation of several other genes switched on by phosphorylated CREB and suppression of dynorphin synthesis (McClung and Nestler, Reference McClung and Nestler2003; Nestler, Reference Nestler2005, Reference Nestler2012). Activation of these genes will result in the production of proteins in charge of responses sensitised to drugs of abuse, including nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) and cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5), both of which can also result in structural alterations of the NAc, making it hypersensitive to addictive substances and drug-related cues (McClung and Nestler, Reference McClung and Nestler2003; Nestler, Reference Nestler2005, Reference Nestler2012). In this stage, the hippocampus also plays a part in the formation of context-specific memories of such experiences to remember the who, the where, the when, and the how of drug self-administration (contextual conditioning) and altogether build a road to relapse (Goodman and Packard, Reference Goodman and Packard2016; Silva et al., Reference Silva, Galinato and Mandyam2016). ΔFosB also contributes to the growth of NAc’s dendritic spines where it has been generated, and these sprouted branches of NAc’s dendritic spines make it more sensitized to the VTA signalling and will last even months after degradation of ΔFosB (Maze et al., Reference Maze, Covingtoni, Dietz, Laplant, Renthal, Russo, Mechanic, Mouzon, Neve, Haggarty, Ren, Sampath, Hurd, Greengard, Tarakhovsky, Schaefer and Nestler2010; Nestler, Reference Nestler2005, Reference Nestler2012). Upon withdrawal or abstinence, this established hypersensitivity and strong memory will result in craving, compulsive drug-seeking behaviours, and relapse (Nestler, Reference Nestler2005; Milton and Everitt, Reference Milton and Everitt2012).
After days of abstinence, the level of CREB remarkably wanes, while ΔFosB’s level, due to its considerable long half-life, will remain steady and reach a plateau for weeks and months even when substance use has ceased. Hence, the diminished concentration of CREB will open a door for the domination of ΔFosB’s deteriorating effects (Figure 1), leading to craving and drug-seeking behaviours (Nestler, Reference Nestler2005, Reference Nestler2012).
We are still in search of efficient, improved treatment strategies to markedly hamper craving and reduce relapse and reinstatement associated with chronic use of drugs of abuse. Having better insights into the driving forces behind reinstatement can potentially shed light on the better management of substance use disorders in the future. Based on the accumulating evidence on ΔFosB’s role in substance use relapse, the following section digs deep into how ΔFosB plays a crucial role in substance use relapse, laying the foundation for understanding how targeting this molecule and its associated signalling pathways could be a way to lessen craving.
ΔFosB as a molecular target in substance use disorders treatment
ΔFosB is a 33–37 kDa protein that belongs to the Fos family of transcription factors, which can form either a heterodimer with the Jun family of proteins, particularly JunD or form stable molecular assemblies on its own (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Cesena, Ohnishi, Burger-Caplan, Lam, Kirchhoff, Larsen, Larsen, Nestler and Rudenko2012; Yin et al., Reference Yin, Venkannagari, Lynch, Aglyamova, Bhandari, Machius, Nestler, Robison and Rudenko2020). Such heterodimerization shapes functional activator protein 1 (AP-1) complexes that can be attached to the AP-1 sites, regulating the transcription of various genes (Nestler, Reference Nestler2001, Reference Nestler2008).
Distinct from other FosB proteins, ΔFosB is bereft of 101 C-terminal amino acids, making it lack two degron domains and, consequently, less prone to degradation (Figure 2) (Carle et al., Reference Carle, Ohnishi, Ohnishi, Alibhai, Wilkinson, Kumar and Nestler2007; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Cesena, Ohnishi, Burger-Caplan, Lam, Kirchhoff, Larsen, Larsen, Nestler and Rudenko2012; Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Crofton, Li, Lobo, Fan, Nestler and Green2014). Moreover, phosphorylation of a well-preserved serine residue (Ser27) of ΔFosB via either previously surmised casein kinase 2 (Ulery et al., Reference Ulery, Rudenko and Nestler2006) or more recently explored Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaMKII) (Robison et al., Reference Robison, Vialou, Mazei-Robison, Feng, Kourrich, Collins, Wee, Koob, Turecki, Neve, Thomas and Nestler2013) prevents degradation of this protein, leading to its long half-life (around 8 days in vivo) (Figure 2). Such longevity confers disparate responses in gene expression after acute and chronic administration of drugs of abuse and makes ΔFosB stable enough to remain active for several weeks even after cessation of drug exposure or drug withdrawal (Figure 1) (Nestler, Reference Nestler2008). Data have shown that such durability is not correlated with ΔFosB’s mRNA long life but rather the protein per se (Kelz and Nestler, Reference Kelz and Nestler2000).
Unlike most Fos family members whose expression is triggered by acute exposure to drugs of abuse and only lasts for hours, ΔFosB is highly expressed in the striatal regions in a medium spiny neuron (MSN)-subtype-selective pattern after repeated chronic administration (Olsen, Reference Olsen2011; Lobo et al., Reference Lobo, Zaman, Damez-Werno, Koo, Bagot, DiNieri, Nugent, Finkel, Chaudhury and Chandra2013a; Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Crofton, Li, Lobo, Fan, Nestler and Green2014). Accordingly, numerous drugs of abuse induce ΔFosB only in MSNs-expressing dopamine D1 receptors, whereas others, such as opioids, induce ΔFosB equally in D1- and D2-MSNs (Lobo et al., Reference Lobo, Zaman, Damez-Werno, Koo, Bagot, DiNieri, Nugent, Finkel, Chaudhury and Chandra2013b). Similarly, a recent study has shown that chronic cocaine use induced broad changes in ΔFosB binding in both D1- and D2-MSNs in NAc (Yeh et al., Reference Yeh, Estill, Lardner, Browne, Minier-Toribio, Futamura, Beach, McManus, Xu and Zhang2023). On the other hand, prolonged administration of some antipsychotic medications induces ΔFosB exclusively in D2-MSNs (Lobo et al., Reference Lobo, Zaman, Damez-Werno, Koo, Bagot, DiNieri, Nugent, Finkel, Chaudhury and Chandra2013b).
Additionally, recent data indicate that, besides the MSN subtype, ΔFosB mediates distinct transcriptional effects in males and females (Lardner et al., Reference Lardner, van der Zee, Estill, Kronman, Salery, Cunningham, Godino, Parise, Kim and Neve2021). Induction of ΔFosB in each subtype of MSNs (D1- vs. D2-MSNs) led to sex- and MSN-specific control of transcripts. In female NAc, induction of ΔFosB in D1-MSNs resulted in opposite regulation compared to D2-MSNs (Lardner et al., Reference Lardner, van der Zee, Estill, Kronman, Salery, Cunningham, Godino, Parise, Kim and Neve2021). Moreover, little overlap was seen among regulatory downstream genes when males and females were compared after induction of ΔFosB in each specific MSN subtype (Lardner et al., Reference Lardner, van der Zee, Estill, Kronman, Salery, Cunningham, Godino, Parise, Kim and Neve2021). Although the sex-specific transcriptional effects of ΔFosB are less studied, these findings are of utmost importance since there are notable sex differences throughout the progression of various substance use disorders and their comorbid conditions (Daiwile et al., Reference Daiwile, Sullivan, Jayanthi, Goldstein and Cadet2022b; Chapp et al., Reference Daiwile, Jayanthi and Cadet2022a, Reference Chapp, Nwakama, Jagtap, Phan, Thomas and Mermelstein2024). Although women tend to be engaged with drugs less frequently than men, they often progress more rapidly to meet the criteria for substance use disorders and may experience more severe psychiatric disturbances compared to men (Cadet, Reference Cadet2021). Additionally, women are generally more prone to relapse (for a comprehensive review, see (Becker and Koob, Reference Becker and Koob2016)). Therefore, the preliminary findings of Lardner et al., on sex-specific transcriptional effects of ΔFosB have significant implications for understanding the pathophysiology underlying relapse and the use of potential drugs in preventing relapse (Lardner et al., Reference Lardner, van der Zee, Estill, Kronman, Salery, Cunningham, Godino, Parise, Kim and Neve2021).
Although it has been shown that ΔFosB’s distribution in the different parts of the striatum is diverse when various drugs are abused, nearly all of them induce the accumulation of ΔFosB in the NAc (Perrotti et al., Reference Perrotti, Weaver, Robison, Renthal, Maze, Yazdani, Elmore, Knapp, Selley, Martin, Sim-Selley, Bachtell, Self and Nestler2008). Besides, findings have suggested that the accumulation of ΔFosB induced by addictive substances targets the dynorphin-containing class of MSNs (Kelz and Nestler, Reference Kelz and Nestler2000).
Gajewski et al., have also demonstrated that the expression profile of ΔFosB differs in various brain regions associated with substance use disorders. They reported a reduced level of ΔFosB in the hippocampus but not in the prefrontal cortex, which is supported by the observation that even some investigated upstream target genes, such as GluA2 and CaMKII, are also downregulated solely in the hippocampus (Gajewski et al., Reference Gajewski, Turecki and Robison2016).
These observations suggest that ΔFosB could be one of the main contributing molecules of reinstatement. In this regard, studies on animal models of relapse have demonstrated that overexpression of ΔFosB not only sensitises the rewarding effect of drugs of abuse but also produces increased drug-seeking behaviour that leads to relapse (Kelz et al., Reference Kelz, Chen, Carlezon, Whisler, Gilden, Beckmann, Steffen, Zhang, Marotti, Self, Tkatch, Baranauskas, Surmeler, Neve, Duman, Picciotto and Nestler1999; Colby et al., Reference Colby, Whisler, Steffen, Nestler and Self2003; Zachariou et al., Reference Zachariou, Bolanos, Selley, Theobald, Cassidy, Kelz, Shaw-Lutchman, Berton, Sim-Selley, Dileone, Kumar and Nestler2006). Of note, McClung et al., have implied that short or long-term expression of ΔFosB acts oppositely and thus leaves distinct outcomes (McClung and Nestler, Reference McClung and Nestler2003). They showed that ΔFosB’s short-term expression in the NAc upregulates many of the same genes as CREB, presumably via direct effect. However, the scenario turned back in case of either overexpression or prolonged elevation of ΔFosB, which facilitates the induction of transcriptional downregulation of genes that CREB had upregulated and vice versa (McClung and Nestler, Reference McClung and Nestler2003).
Besides preclinical studies, post-mortem analyses of the brain tissues of chronic opioid abusers have revealed enhanced expression of ΔFosB in the NAc that was followed by a rise in the level of its downstream targets such as Cdk5, NF-κB, CREB, brain-derived neurotrophic factor, and JunD in both the hippocampus and NAc (Seltenhammer et al., Reference Seltenhammer, Resch, Stichenwirth, Seigner, Reisinger and Vycudilik2016). They confirmed that ΔFosB and its downstream transcriptional targets are critical to inducing sustainable brain changes and establishing a strong memory associated with drugs of abuse on the road to dependency and relapse (Seltenhammer et al., Reference Seltenhammer, Resch, Stichenwirth, Seigner, Reisinger and Vycudilik2016).
The dimerisation of ΔFosB with JunD possibly circumvents CREB on being attached to the cAMP response element (CRE) site and, as a result, acts contrariwise to that of CREB. It can also be postulated that higher levels of ΔFosB may act as an AP-1 activator (McClung and Nestler, Reference McClung and Nestler2003). Finally, CaMKII, a protein upregulated as ΔFosB is continuously overexpressed, has been introduced as another potential candidate for these observations (McClung and Nestler, Reference McClung and Nestler2003; Robison et al., Reference Robison, Vialou, Mazei-Robison, Feng, Kourrich, Collins, Wee, Koob, Turecki, Neve, Thomas and Nestler2013). CaMKII hinders the dimerisation of CREB with CREB binding protein via phosphorylating CREB (McClung and Nestler, Reference McClung and Nestler2003).
In a study conducted by Vialou et al., following chronic cocaine administration, expression of both CREB and serum response factor (SRF) were shown to be essential for the accumulation and regulation of NAc’s ΔFosB (Vialou et al., Reference Vialou, Feng, Robison, Ku, Ferguson, Scobie, Mazei-Robison, Mouzon and Nestler2012; Eagle et al., Reference Eagle, Al Masraf, Robison and Mary2019). They concluded that upstream modulation of ΔFosB requires the adequate expression of both transcription factors and deletion of either could not prevent the accumulation of ΔFosB in the NAc (Vialou et al., Reference Vialou, Feng, Robison, Ku, Ferguson, Scobie, Mazei-Robison, Mouzon and Nestler2012; Eagle et al., Reference Eagle, Al Masraf, Robison and Mary2019).
There are also studies pointing to RNA-binding proteins involved in regulating ΔFosB. Recent evidence suggests synergistic effects of D1 dopaminergic and activin receptor-like kinase 4 (ALK4) signalling, mediated by activation of poly-binding protein 1 (PCBP1) and Smad3 in MSNs of NAc, induce ΔFosB production and its reward-related behaviour (Krapacher et al., Reference Krapacher, Fernández-Suárez, Andersson, Carrier-Ruiz and Ibáñez2022). Enhanced expression of an RNA-binding protein called polypyrimidine tract-binding protein 1 (PTBP1) was suggested to cause reduced transcription of ΔFosB (Alibhai et al., Reference Alibhai, Green, Potashkin and Nestler2007; Bryant and Yazdani, Reference Bryant and Yazdani2016). Another study pointed out that elevation in the level of ΔFosB can be modulated by intraperitoneal administration of molecular hydrogen in methamphetamine-dependent mice (Wen et al., Reference Wen, Hui, Liu, Luo, Wang, Shen, Xie, Yu, Cong and Ma2020). Wen et al. also showed that molecular hydrogen (delivered by the administration of hydrogen-rich saline) reduces behavioural sensitisation by acting as an antioxidant, inhibiting the production of superoxide anion, and diminishing the amount of phosphorylated ERK and ΔFosB in the NAc (Wen et al., Reference Wen, Hui, Liu, Luo, Wang, Shen, Xie, Yu, Cong and Ma2020).
Interestingly, this observed overexpression is not only limited to the drugs of abuse but also other compounds, such as sweeteners that activate the brain’s reward system (Salaya-Velazquez et al., Reference Salaya-Velazquez, López-Muciño, Mejía-Chávez, Sánchez-Aparicio, Domínguez-Guadarrama and Venebra-Muñoz2020) and even stressful conditions (Perrotti et al., Reference Perrotti, Hadeishi, Ulery, Barrot, Monteggia, Duman and Nestler2004; Scalize Hirata et al., Reference Scalize Hirata, dos Santos, de Andrade, Le Sueur Maluf, Antunes, Britto, Céspedes and de Barros Viana2019). Keeping all these in mind, it is worth mentioning that stress and stressful adverse events in life can not only lead to addiction but also predispose abstained patients with substance use disorders to reinstate and relapse (Goeders, Reference Goeders2003; Sinha, Reference Sinha2008, Reference Sinha2012). Though different mechanisms contribute to such phenomena, assessing the role stress plays in manipulating ΔFosB toward an increased susceptibility to relapse is not out of reason. A study has shown that repeated social defeat stress significantly enhances the expression of ΔFosB in the frontal cortex, shell, and core of the NAc, and the medial, central, and basolateral amygdala (mesocorticolimbic areas) that started after the last imposed stress and lasted for 21 days which was correlated with upregulation of µ-opioid receptor in the VTA-NAc pathway (Nikulina et al., Reference Nikulina, Arrillaga-Romany, Miczek and Hammer2008). A report also indicates that chronic restraint stress induces higher locomotor activity after amphetamine administration, resulting in cross-sensitization that is associated with enhanced ΔFosB expression levels in the NAc of only adult and not adolescent rats (Carneiro De Oliveira et al., Reference Carneiro De Oliveira, Leão, Bianchi, Marin, Da Silva Planeta and Cruz2016).
A path to relapse: a concise look into possible mechanisms in which ΔFosB begets drug-seeking behaviours and craving and how N-acetylcysteine may rectify these alterations
Human studies are indicative that behavioural changes associated with addiction are exceptionally persistent. Therefore, researchers started figuring out the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in enduring behavioural abnormalities. In this section, we briefly enumerate potential targets that ΔFosB aims at on various levels and determine whether N-acetylcysteine could alter these pathways (Figure 3).
N-acetylcysteine is an accessible, well-tolerated, over-the-counter medicine of low cost with a safe profile regarding adverse effects. It serves as the N-acetylated derivative of the amino acid cysteine and, as such, acts as a prodrug by binding to the cysteine-glutamate exchanger. N-acetylcysteine also promotes the efflux of glial glutamate while importing cysteine, resulting in a net increase in the extracellular levels of glutamate in the brain.
Dendritic arborisation and synaptic plasticity as common targets of different pathways
ΔFosB is presumed to influence AMPAR-containing GluR2 receptors and modify glutamatergic signalling by altering the neural excitability of NAc neurons due to overexpression of these receptors. Reduced neural conductance followed by diminished Ca2+ permeability can affect the excitability of neurons, and prolonged exposure to addictive drugs can change the susceptibility of neurons to rewarding stimuli (Kelz et al., Reference Kelz, Chen, Carlezon, Whisler, Gilden, Beckmann, Steffen, Zhang, Marotti, Self, Tkatch, Baranauskas, Surmeler, Neve, Duman, Picciotto and Nestler1999; Nestler, Reference Nestler2001; Nestler et al., Reference Nestler, Barrot and Self2001). This phenomenon has been shown to exacerbate responses to cues and subsequent increases in craving and relapse (Kelz et al., Reference Kelz, Chen, Carlezon, Whisler, Gilden, Beckmann, Steffen, Zhang, Marotti, Self, Tkatch, Baranauskas, Surmeler, Neve, Duman, Picciotto and Nestler1999; Todtenkopf et al., Reference Todtenkopf, Parsegian, Naydenov, Neve, Konradi and Carlezon2006). An additional study exploring the mechanisms underlying resilience and antidepressant response has further affirmed that ΔFosB can regulate the expression of GluR2 and exert control over complex behaviours (Vialou et al., Reference Vialou, Robison, Laplant, Covington, Dietz, Ohnishi, Mouzon, Rush, Watts, Wallace, Ĩiguez, Ohnishi, Steiner, Warren, Krishnan, Bolãos, Neve, Ghose, Berton, Tamminga and Nestler2010). However, in a preclinical study conducted by Conrad et al., a significant connection was established between the presence of increased GluR2-lacking AMPARs in the NAc of rats following extended periods of withdrawal from cocaine, leading to the hypothesis that such an increase may also contribute to enhanced cocaine craving (Conrad et al., Reference Conrad, Tseng, Uejima, Reimers, Heng, Shaham, Marinelli and Wolf2008).
Short-term expression of ΔFosB also leaves different outcomes on D1-type versus D2-type MSNs of the NAc (Grueter et al., Reference Grueter, Robison, Neve, Nestler and Malenka2013). Observations indicate diminished AMPA-related synaptic transmission (reduced excitatory synaptic strength) in D1 receptor-expressing neurons in both the NAc’s shell and core via the direct pathway that shapes silent synapses (increased silent synapses onto D1-type). In contrast, an increase in D2-type excitatory transmission through an indirect pathway only on the shell of NAc has been reported (Grueter et al., Reference Grueter, Robison, Neve, Nestler and Malenka2013). Grueter et al. further depicted that morphological changes of the immature dendritic spines are under the influence of direct D1-type MSNs of the NAc and attributed the cocaine-evoked abnormal behaviours to the D1 direct but not D2 indirect pathway, therefore highlighting the cell-type and sub-regional-specific manner of ΔFosB’s mode of action to cocaine-associated behavioural responses (Grueter et al., Reference Grueter, Robison, Neve, Nestler and Malenka2013). In contrast, Lee et al., have demonstrated that ΔFosB participates in the short-term induction of increased spine density in both D1- and D2-containing MSNs of NAc (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Kim, Kim, Helmin, Nairn and Greengard2006). However, such an enhanced density of dendritic spines and ΔFosB overexpression are maintained and remain stable, specifically in the D1 type MSNs of NAc, even after a month of cocaine withdrawal (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Kim, Kim, Helmin, Nairn and Greengard2006). Moreover, elevated levels of ΔFosB can enhance the expression of NMDA receptors of the mesocorticolimbic pathway, especially on the MSNs of the NAc, which further leads to long-term potentiation and hijacks the associated memory pathways (Daneff and Jadavji, Reference Daneff and Jadavji2019).
Transcriptional downstream targets
Evidence has pointed out that ΔFosB is one of the primary regulators of transcriptional phenotype changes that occur with repeated consumption of addictive substances that ultimately result in not only addiction-related behavioural responses but also natural rewards (Nestler, Reference Nestler2008; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Vialou, Rios, Carle-Florence, Chakravarty, Kumar, Graham, Green, Kirk, Iñiguez, Perrotti, Barrot, DiLeone, Nestler and Bolaños-Guzmán2008; Bali and Kenny, Reference Bali and Kenny2019).
Studies on transgenic animals overexpressing ΔFosB suggested the prominent role of this transcription factor in liability to relapse after the termination of drug consumption and even when the level of ΔFosB backs to its normal concentration (Colby et al., Reference Colby, Whisler, Steffen, Nestler and Self2003; McClung and Nestler, Reference McClung and Nestler2003; Nestler, Reference Nestler2008). Findings on the expression profile of ΔFosB have delineated that the ongoing predisposition to relapse and drug-taking/seeking behaviours might not directly be affected by ΔFosB per se (Larson et al., Reference Larson, Akkentli, Edwards, Graham, Simmons, Alibhai, Nestler and Self2010) but instead can trigger several transcriptional cascades that have impacts on the morphology and neural circuits of NAc neurons, thus mediating neural adaptation (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Kim, Kim, Helmin, Nairn and Greengard2006; Ang et al., Reference Ang, Chen, Zagouras, Magna, Holland, Schaeffer and Nestler2008; Maze et al., Reference Maze, Covingtoni, Dietz, Laplant, Renthal, Russo, Mechanic, Mouzon, Neve, Haggarty, Ren, Sampath, Hurd, Greengard, Tarakhovsky, Schaefer and Nestler2010; Gajewski et al., Reference Gajewski, Turecki and Robison2016).
Enhanced expression and accumulation of ΔFosB raise levels of both mRNA and protein of Cdk5 and p35, which is regulated by the AP-1 site on the gene’s promoter (Chen et al., Reference Chen, Zhang, Kelz, Steffen, Ang, Zeng and Nestler2000; Bibb et al., Reference Bibb, Chen, Taylor, Svenningsson, Nishi, Snyder, Yan, Sagawa, Ouimet, Nairn, Nestler and Greengard2001; Benavides and Bibb, Reference Benavides and Bibb2004). Cdk5/p35 involves diverse central nervous system processes, including synaptic plasticity, learning, and memory (Takahashi et al., Reference Takahashi, Nakabayashi, Mita, Jin, Aikawa, Sasamoto, Miyoshi, Miyata, Inoue and Ohshima2022). Cdk5 further dampens D1 dopaminergic signalling, possibly via augmented phosphorylation of dopamine- and cAMP-regulated neuronal phosphoprotein DARPP-32 (PPP1RB) (Bibb et al., Reference Bibb, Chen, Taylor, Svenningsson, Nishi, Snyder, Yan, Sagawa, Ouimet, Nairn, Nestler and Greengard2001; Benavides and Bibb, Reference Benavides and Bibb2004).
In addition, myocyte enhancer factor 2 (MEF2) has been introduced as another critical regulator of structural and behavioural plasticity and is involved in developing various neuropsychiatric disorders (Pulipparacharuvil et al., Reference Pulipparacharuvil, Renthal, Hale, Taniguchi, Xiao, Kumar, Russo, Sikder, Dewey, Davis, Greengard, Nairn, Nestler and Cowan2008; Zhang and Zhao, Reference Zhang and Zhao2022). Reduction in the striatal level of MEF2 has been implicated in causing increased dendritic spine density after chronic administration of cocaine. This event is induced by the release of cAMP through the activation of D1 receptors that prevents the further activity of calcineurin at the inhibitory Cdk5 site (Pulipparacharuvil et al., Reference Pulipparacharuvil, Renthal, Hale, Taniguchi, Xiao, Kumar, Russo, Sikder, Dewey, Davis, Greengard, Nairn, Nestler and Cowan2008). However, the possible correlation between diminished MEF2 and increased expression of ΔFosB should be sought.
Additionally, the opioid peptide dynorphin is a target through which ΔFosB exerts its behavioural phenotype (Zachariou et al., Reference Zachariou, Bolanos, Selley, Theobald, Cassidy, Kelz, Shaw-Lutchman, Berton, Sim-Selley, Dileone, Kumar and Nestler2006). It is also shown that prodynorphin, the dynorphin precursor, is a known target for CREB and that chronic consumption of cocaine is associated with CREB-mediated dynorphin expression in NAc (Teague and Nestler, Reference Teague and Nestler2021).
Another putative target of ΔFosB is another transcription factor named NF-κB. Enhanced expression of NF-κB in the NAc only after chronic but not acute treatment with cocaine has raised the idea that NF-κB may be under the control of ΔFosB. NF-κB engages in long-term plasticity and enhances dendritic density as Cdk5 does (Bibb et al., Reference Bibb, Chen, Taylor, Svenningsson, Nishi, Snyder, Yan, Sagawa, Ouimet, Nairn, Nestler and Greengard2001; Ang et al., Reference Ang, Chen, Zagouras, Magna, Holland, Schaeffer and Nestler2008; Boersma et al., Reference Boersma, Dresselhaus, de Biase, Mihalas, Bergles and Meffert2011; Dresselhaus et al., Reference Dresselhaus, Boersma and Meffert2018), thus contributing to craving and drug-seeking behaviours.
Epigenetics
There are emerging lines of evidence that ΔFosB might leave its long-lasting effect by epigenetic alterations since studies have signified that even after protracted withdrawal and return of ΔFosB’s level to normal, the corresponding effects of it still abide (Mews et al., Reference Mews, Walker and Nestler2018).
ΔFosB alters neuronal morphology by targeting histone methyltransferase G9a. Maze et al. have reported that enhanced expression of ΔFosB can result in the repression of lysine dimethyltransferase G9a, which further reduces the dimethylation of histone 3 lysine 9 (H3K9) in the NAc during repeated cocaine exposure. Such a downregulated level of G9a and the subsequent decrease in the process of histone methylation leads to dendritic arborisation and an enhanced tendency to reinstate cocaine abuse (Maze et al., Reference Maze, Covingtoni, Dietz, Laplant, Renthal, Russo, Mechanic, Mouzon, Neve, Haggarty, Ren, Sampath, Hurd, Greengard, Tarakhovsky, Schaefer and Nestler2010).
Acetylation of H3 and H4 histone subtypes at the promoters of plasticity-associated genes, including Fos, has also been shown to be increased following cocaine exposure (Stewart et al., Reference Stewart, Fulton and Maze2021). Furthermore, a recent study demonstrated that inhibition of histone deacetylase results in an increase of ΔFosB gene expression in the NAc and medial prefrontal cortex while also reducing reinstatement of morphine-induced conditioned place preference in rats, confirming the role of epigenetic mechanisms, namely histone acetylation, in the adjustment of drug-induced plasticity (Saberian et al., Reference Saberian, Taei, Torkaman-Boutorabi, Riahi, Aminyavari, Naghizadeh and Farahmandfar2021). Promoters of ΔFosB and CREB genes involved in glutamate transmission are thought to be hyperacetylated in the NAc after cocaine administration (Kennedy et al., Reference Kennedy, Feng, Robison, Maze, Badimon, Mouzon, Chaudhury, Damez-Werno, Haggarty, Han, Bassel-Duby, Olson and Nestler2013), and sustained inhibition of histone deacetylase can stimulate G9a (Kennedy et al., Reference Kennedy, Feng, Robison, Maze, Badimon, Mouzon, Chaudhury, Damez-Werno, Haggarty, Han, Bassel-Duby, Olson and Nestler2013; Eagle et al., Reference Eagle, Al Masraf, Robison and Mary2019). ΔFosB and CREB can facilitate signalling transmission through enhanced permeability of Ca2+ that is modulated by histone acetylation (Mews et al., Reference Mews, Walker and Nestler2018). By using H3.3 histone barcoding of NAc, Wimmer et al. reported an increase in upregulation of the FosB gene in cocaine self-administration mice and the implication of other novel molecular cascades in cocaine-induced neuronal plasticity (Wimmer et al., Reference Wimmer, Fant, Swinford-Jackson, Testino, Van Nest, Abel and Pierce2019). Moreover, following administration of amphetamine, histone deacetylase budges to the Fos gene promoter and controls its expression (Torres et al., Reference Torres, Mccoy, Ladenheim, Jayanthi, Brannock, Tulloch, Krasnova and Cadet2015). Therefore, it should be explored in-depth whether ΔFosB can broadly affect histone modification and coding (Eagle et al., Reference Eagle, Al Masraf, Robison and Mary2019).
N-acetylcysteine and preclinical and clinical studies on relapse to substance abuse
There are comprehensive reviews on preclinical and clinical studies of N-acetylcysteine in substance use disorders and other psychiatric disorders (Dean et al., Reference Dean, Giorlando and Berk2011; Minarini et al., Reference Minarini, Ferrari, Galletti, Giambalvo, Perrone, Rioli and Galeazzi2017; Smaga et al., Reference Smaga, Frankowska and Filip2021a). Here, we only focus on evidence with a direct nexus to relapse/cravings and drug-seeking behaviours.
Preclinical studies
The majority of studies investigating the effect of N-acetylcysteine on relapse or cravings have primarily focused on alcohol and cocaine use. In a preclinical study, N-acetylcysteine was able to attenuate the accumulation of ΔFosB in the mPFC, leading to reduced craving and prevention of ethanol-induced neuroadaptions associated with ΔFosB in a mouse model of behavioural sensitisation (Morais-Silva et al., Reference Morais-Silva, Alves and Marin2016). Although, unlike most studies, the authors could not observe an increased ΔFosB expression in the NAc (Morais-Silva et al., Reference Morais-Silva, Alves and Marin2016). Another preclinical report of such an effect was published later, indicating that N-acetylcysteine diminishes ethanol-seeking behaviour to a great extent of 77 percent along with reacquisition after protracted abstinence in rats self-administering ethanol chronically by 78 percent, pointing to the application of N-acetylcysteine as a treatment to prevent relapse (Lebourgeois et al., Reference Lebourgeois, González-Marín, Jeanblanc, Naassila and Vilpoux2018).
Recently, Fredriksson et al., have also presented evidence that N-acetylcysteine improves impulse control and attenuates the likelihood of relapse in male rats with long-term alcohol consumption (Fredriksson et al., Reference Fredriksson, Jayaram-Lindström, Kalivas, Melas and Steensland2023). However, no significant difference was observed in the quantity of alcohol consumed or the motivation to drink (Fredriksson et al., Reference Fredriksson, Jayaram-Lindström, Kalivas, Melas and Steensland2023). Using another animal model to evaluate ethanol-relapse drinking behaviour, the alcohol deprivation effect model, N-acetylcysteine was shown to be effective in preventing relapse by reducing the heightened intake of alcohol following a period of abstinence (Cano-Cebrián et al., Reference Cano-Cebrián, Fernández-Rodríguez, Hipólito, Granero, Polache and Zornoza2021). The effective dose range of N-acetylcysteine on ethanol in these preclinical studies was between 60 and 120 mg/kg.
Besides alcohol, some preclinical studies have also addressed N-acetylcysteine’s impact on cocaine-seeking behaviour. Findings from a study by Amen et al., demonstrated that repeated N-acetylcysteine administration (60 mg/kg for 7 days) resulted in a significant decrease in cocaine-seeking behaviour in rats, and these findings were further validated in the same study through reductions in craving in cocaine-dependent humans as well (Amen et al., Reference Amen, Piacentine, Ahmad, Li, Mantsch, Risinger and Baker2011). Additionally, findings from another study have demonstrated that N-acetylcysteine (100 mg/kg) prevented cocaine and alcohol seeking following acute restraint stress (Garcia-Keller et al., Reference Garcia-Keller, Smiley, Monforton, Melton, Kalivas and Gass2020). In another study, N-acetylcysteine amide has also been shown to effectively block cocaine-seeking behaviour in rats (Jastrzębska et al., Reference Jastrzębska, Frankowska, Filip and Atlas2016). Moreover, N-acetylcysteine has been demonstrated to prevent cocaine-primed reinstatement, suggesting that this treatment can alter the plasticity-dependent effects of cocaine (Madayag et al., Reference Madayag, Lobner, Kau, Mantsch, Abdulhameed, Hearing, Grier and Baker2007).
Clinical trials
Several clinical studies have also investigated the impact of N-acetylcysteine on craving and substance use relapse in populations with various substance use disorders (Table 1). In a human study involving veterans with both post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and substance use disorders, the administration of N-acetylcysteine (1200 mg twice a day) led to improved craving compared to the placebo (Back et al., Reference Back, McCauley, Korte, Gros, Leavitt, Gray, Hamner, DeSantis, Malcolm and Brady2016). A recent double-blind placebo-controlled trial has also demonstrated that supplementation with N-acetylcysteine (2700 mg daily) resulted in significant benefits on measures of drug craving among treatment-resistant PTSD individuals. However, it did not affect other PTSD symptoms (Kanaan et al., Reference Kanaan, Oliver, Dharan, Sendi, Maier, Mohebbi, Ng, Back, Kalivas and Berk2023).
There have also been several studies exploring N-acetylcysteine in cocaine use disorder. In a double-blind placebo-controlled trial aiming at evaluating the efficacy of N-acetylcysteine (2400 mg daily) for treating cocaine use disorder, no correlations were found between measures related to relapse (LaRowe et al., Reference LaRowe, Kalivas, Nicholas, Randall, Mardikian and Malcolm2013). Nevertheless, a subgroup of enrolled patients who were already abstinent before the trial’s commencement exhibited a longer duration of time to relapse, indicating that N-acetylcysteine might have a protective role in abstained patients with cocaine use disorder (LaRowe et al., Reference LaRowe, Kalivas, Nicholas, Randall, Mardikian and Malcolm2013). Findings from the same authors also showed that there were trends for a greater reduction in cocaine withdrawal symptoms and craving within N-acetylcysteine treatment compared to the placebo (LaRowe et al., Reference LaRowe, Mardikian, Malcolm, Myrick, Kalivas, McFarland, Saladin, McRae and Brady2006). In a more recent trial by Woodcock et al., N-acetylcysteine treatment (3600 mg/day for 1 week) suppressed cocaine-seeking behaviour (Woodcock et al., Reference Woodcock, Lundahl, Khatib, Stanley and Greenwald2021). However, another trial failed to show N-acetylcysteine’s effect on craving, number of abstinent days, and days until relapse in cocaine-dependent individuals. Nevertheless, the study showed that N-acetylcysteine was associated with lower positive urine tests, lower cocaine use-related problems and inhibition (Schulte et al., Reference Schulte, Wiers, Boendermaker, Goudriaan, van den Brink, van Deursen, Friese, Brede and Waters2018).
Studies on the effects of N-acetylcysteine on methamphetamine use disorder have been inconclusive so far, with one study showing no reduction in craving (McKetin et al., Reference McKetin, Dean, Turner, Kelly, Quinn, Lubman, Dietze, Carter, Higgs and Sinclair2021), but another study reporting a decrease in methamphetamine craving (Mousavi et al., Reference Mousavi, Salehi, Peykanpour, Sichani and Maracy2015). Similarly, trials on cannabis use disorders have been inconsistent, with studies showing improved cannabis abstinence following N-acetylcysteine treatment in adolescents (gray et al., Reference Gray, Carpenter, Baker, DeSantis, Kryway, Hartwell, McRae-Clark and Brady2012), but not in adults (gray et al., Reference Gray, Sonne, McClure, Ghitza, Matthews, McRae-Clark, Carroll, Potter, Wiest, Mooney, Hasson, Walsh, Lofwall, Babalonis, Lindblad, Sparenborg, Wahle and King2017).
In terms of nicotine use disorder, in a pilot randomised placebo-controlled trial, no significant decrease in craving after short-term abstinence (3.5 days) was observed. However, participants receiving a daily dose of 3600 mg N-acetylcysteine reported their initial smoking experience being less rewarding after abstinence. This finding suggests a potential avenue for further research into the viability of N-acetylcysteine as a good candidate for relapse prevention in nicotine use disorder as well (Schmaal et al., Reference Schmaal, Berk, Hulstijn, Cousijn, Wiers and van den Brink2011). In later studies, while some trials reported no significant outcomes following N-acetylcysteine in nicotine-dependent individuals (Schulte et al., Reference Schulte, Goudriaan, Kaag, Kooi, Van Den Brink, Wiers and Schmaal2017; McClure et al., Reference McClure, Wahlquist and Tomko2021), several other trials reported that N-acetylcysteine treatment resulted in less craving (Froeliger et al., Reference Froeliger, McConnell, Stankeviciute, McClure, Kalivas and Gray2015; Harlivasari et al., Reference Harlivasari, Susanto, Taufik and Cureus2024), nicotine dependence (Grant et al., Reference Grant, Odlaug, Chamberlain, Potenza, Schreiber, Donahue and Kim2014), and reduction in cigarettes smoked (Knackstedt et al., Reference Knackstedt, LaRowe, Mardikian, Malcolm, Upadhyaya, Hedden, Markou and Kalivas2009; Prado et al., Reference Prado, Maes, Piccoli, Baracat, Barbosa, Franco, Dodd, Berk and Nunes2015).
When it comes to alcohol use disorder, a recent trial by Morley et al., has shown that N-acetylcysteine reduced the number of drinks but did not affect craving (Morley et al., Reference Morley, Peruch, Adams, Towers, Tremonti, Watt and Haber2023). Another trial demonstrated that N-acetylcysteine increased the odds of alcohol abstinence, fewer drinks per week, and fewer drinking days per week (Squeglia et al., Reference Squeglia, Tomko, Baker, McClure, Book and Gray2018). However, two other studies showed that N-acetylcysteine did not affect drinking outcomes (Stoops et al., Reference Stoops, Strickland, Hays, Rayapati, Lile and Rush2020) (Squeglia et al., Reference Squeglia, Baker, McClure, Tomko, Adisetiyo and Gray2016).
While human clinical results remain inconsistent, two systematic reviews and meta-analyses have concluded the superiority of N-acetylcysteine to placebo in the reduction of cravings among individuals with substance use disorders (Duailibi et al., Reference Duailibi, Cordeiro, Brietzke, Ribeiro, LaRowe, Berk and Trevizol2017; Chang et al., Reference Chang, Hsieh, Lee, Lo, Tam and Loh2021). Although these findings are obtained from the pooled analysis of different abused substances, the compelling outcome stimulates further studies to elucidate the specific and nuanced impact of N-acetylcysteine on craving symptoms in individuals with substance use disorders.
Mechanistic insights into how N-acetylcysteine can affect drug use relapse and craving
There is evidence on how N-acetylcysteine can potentially contribute to decreasing drug use relapse and craving. Here, we provide potential mechanisms for N-acetylcysteine’s impact on dendritic arborisation, synaptic plasticity, transcriptional downstream targets, and epigenetics, which offer a possible link with ΔFosB-related signalling in drug use relapse and craving (Figure 3).
N-acetylcysteine rectification of altered dendritic arborizations and synaptic plasticity
The ability of N-acetylcysteine to directly and indirectly modulate glutamatergic neurotransmission, which becomes dysregulated post-withdrawal and contributes to drug-seeking behaviours, via interactions with glutamate-transporter type 1 (GLT-1) (Knackstedt et al., Reference Knackstedt, Melendez and Kalivas2010), as well as NMDARs and AMPARs (Smaga et al., Reference Smaga, Frankowska and Filip2021b), positions it as a promising candidate for substance use relapse prevention. Reissner et al., reported that in a rat model of cocaine relapse, N-acetylcysteine effectively inhibited cue-induced cocaine reinstatement through the engagement of GLT-1 (Reissner et al., Reference Reissner, Gipson, Tran, Knackstedt, Scofield and Kalivas2015). Furthermore, another study also indicated that N-acetylcysteine restores the decrease in GLT-1 levels in both the NAc and dorsal striatum during prolonged but not short cocaine self-administration in rats. This phenomenon was accompanied by an upregulation in the expression of the transcription factor Zif268 (Ducret et al., Reference Ducret, Puaud, Lacoste, Belin-Rauscent, Fouyssac, Dugast, Murray, Everitt, Houeto and Belin2016). Moreover, a recent study by Siemsen et al. demonstrated that heroin self-administration and extinction increased prelimbic cortical astrocyte-synapse proximity and circuit-level adaptations in cortical dendritic spine morphology. At the same time, N-acetylcysteine reversed these adaptations in corticostriatal neurons and astrocytes (Siemsen et al., Reference Siemsen, Denton, Parrila-Carrero, Hooker, Carpenter, Prescot, Brock, Westphal, Leath and McFaddin2023).
N-acetylcysteine has also been shown to exhibit a dose-dependent bidirectional effect on the release of dopamine (Gere-Pászti and Jakus, Reference Gere-Pászti and Jakus2009). At the same time, higher doses of N-acetylcysteine hamper striatal dopamine release. Lower doses are associated with an increased release of dopamine in the striatum (Gere-Pászti and Jakus, Reference Gere-Pászti and Jakus2009). Besides, in a primate study, N-acetylcysteine protected against the reduction of striatal dopamine transporter availability, followed by chronic administration of methamphetamine (Hashimoto et al., Reference Hashimoto, Tsukada, Nishiyama, Fukumoto, Kakiuchi, Shimizu and Iyo2004).
The impacts N-acetylcysteine exerts on dopamine availability and the regulation of NMDAR activity can, in part, be germane to facilitating glutathione production (Dean et al., Reference Dean, Giorlando and Berk2011). Glutathione can then affect the glutamatergic signalling without altering the level of glutamate (Bradlow et al., Reference Bradlow, Berk, Kalivas, Back and Kanaan2022). Elevated levels of accumbal glutathione in the brains of rats have been reported following treatment with N-acetylcysteine. The increase is believed to result from cell-type specific shifts in glutamatergic inputs to the NAc’s MSNs (Zalachoras et al., Reference Zalachoras, Ramos-Fernández, Hollis, Trovo, Rodrigues, Strasser, Zanoletti, Steiner, Preitner and Xin2022).
On the other hand, there are studies on the alterations in long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD) during drug withdrawal or reinstatement. For instance, Qian et al., demonstrated that morphine withdrawal brings about the downregulation of mGluR2/3, impairing NMDA receptor-dependent LTD in the NAc (Qian et al., Reference Qian, Wu, Qiao, Shi, Liu, Ren, Han and Zheng2019). Moreover, in a study using a reinstatement animal model of drug-seeking behaviour, it was demonstrated that cocaine-induced metaplasticity impaired the induction of LTP and LTD at the PFC-NAc, a phenomenon linked to relapse vulnerability (Moussawi et al., Reference Moussawi, Pacchioni, Moran, Olive, Gass, Lavin and Kalivas2009). Interestingly, N-acetylcysteine not only prevented relapse and cravings but also restored the induction of LTP. This restoration was presumably achieved through indirect stimulation of mGluRs (mGluR2/3 and mGluR5 primarily), possibly associated with the activation of the cysteine-glutamate exchange system (Moussawi et al., Reference Moussawi, Pacchioni, Moran, Olive, Gass, Lavin and Kalivas2009). The cysteine-glutamate antiporter regulates glutamate release, which in turn activates presynaptic neuronal mGluR2/3, thereby modulating the vesicular transmission of glutamate (Berk et al., Reference Berk, Malhi, Gray and Dean2013).
Taken together, all these lines of evidence suggest that N-acetylcysteine is a potential candidate to rectify the altered glutamatergic and dopaminergic neurotransmission in individuals vulnerable to relapse and reinstatement. The shared dynamics of N-acetylcysteine’s interaction with ΔFosB signalling warrant further research to comprehensively understand its potential therapeutic role.
N-acetylcysteine impacts on altered transcriptional downstream targets
N-acetylcysteine can be a modulator of redox hemostasis by mitigating the activity of NF-κB through inhibition of IkappaB kinases (Oka et al., Reference Oka, Kamata, Kamata, Yagisawa and Hirata2000; Farid et al., Reference Farid, Reid, Li, Gerken and Durham2005; Fischer et al., Reference Fischer, Antonyan, Bloch and Mehlhorn2006; Mackenzie et al., Reference Mackenzie, Zago, Erlejman, Aimo, Keen and Oteiza2006). AP-1 has also been demonstrated as a target for N-acetylcysteine, where its activity is diminished via the production of glutathione and the suppression of reactive oxygen species generation (Sen and Packer, Reference Sen and Packer1996; Mackenzie et al., Reference Mackenzie, Zago, Erlejman, Aimo, Keen and Oteiza2006; Shi et al., Reference Shi, Gu, Xie, Zhou, Mao, Lin, Liu, Liu, Zou and Zhao2017). A recent study has also provided evidence that N-acetylcysteine is also capable of diminishing and normalising the hyperactivity of Cdk5, showcasing therapeutic potential in disorders where the excessive enzymatic activity of Cdk5 is implicated (Saha et al., Reference Saha, Paul, Gaharwar, Priya, Neog, Singh and Bk2023), including relapse to substance use and reinstatement behaviour.
Considering the significance of these three downstream entities of ΔFosB in the pathophysiology of relapse, N-acetylcysteine has the potential to reverse the elevated levels of CREB and Cdk5 induced by the overexpression of AP-1 while also addressing heightened levels of NF-κB and Cdk5, which have established roles in craving and drug-seeking behaviour.
N-acetylcysteine’s impact on epigenetics
Given the role of epigenetics in the pathophysiology of relapse, it is of note to mention that in mammalian cells, histone H3 undergoes S-glutathionylation, introducing glutathione as a novel post-translational participant of the modification of the histone code (García-Giménez et al., Reference García-Giménez, Roma-Mateo, Perez-Machado, Peiro-Chova and Pallardó2017). However, glutathione’s impact on epigenetic processes goes far beyond H3, and a substantial body of evidence supports the notion that glutathione plays a significant role in epigenetic regulation at various levels (García-Giménez et al., Reference García-Giménez, Roma-Mateo, Perez-Machado, Peiro-Chova and Pallardó2017). This includes its influence on DNA methylation, histone post-translational modification, non-coding RNAs, and even modulation of chromatin structure (Cyr and Domann, Reference Cyr and Domann2011; García-Giménez et al., Reference García-Giménez, Roma-Mateo, Perez-Machado, Peiro-Chova and Pallardó2017)
This regulatory effect of glutathione on epigenetic processes positions N-acetylcysteine, its precursor, as a prospective candidate for potential epigenetic dysregulation influenced by substance use disorders and implicated in the pathophysiology of relapse and cravings. Nevertheless, it is crucial to emphasise that further in-depth explorative and confirmatory studies are needed to assess N-acetylcysteine’s efficacy and involvement in this context fully. The establishment of a robust scientific foundation through comprehensive research may help determine whether N-acetylcysteine could act as a potential therapeutic tool for modifying altered epigenetic processes induced by substance use disorders.
Concluding remarks
Relapse and reinstatement to drugs of abuse, even after successfully quitting them, is a deadlock to reaching the ultimately desired treatment goals in substance use disorders. To overcome the relapse, the biological components behind such an unbridled craving should intensively be sought. ΔFosB is one of the presumed candidates responsible for morphological and psychobiological alterations in an addicted brain. In specific brain parts, ΔFosB can modulate several downstream transcriptional factors, such as NF-κB and Cdk5. It also affects AMPA and NMDA receptors through glutamatergic neurotransmission and controls synaptic plasticity. One other explanation of how ΔFosB leaves such permanent effects is epigenetic modifications. Though we have good evidence to rely on, there is much ground to be made up, and further studies are needed to illuminate the role of ΔFosB in relapse and craving comprehensively (Question Box).
Knowing the intricate roles and mechanisms behind ΔFosB’s mode of action in substance use disorders, we might be able to target several upstream and downstream related components to obliterate the associated memory with drugs of abuse and introduce a new treatment strategy to avoid relapse and reinforcement. N-acetylcysteine has demonstrated effectiveness in preventing relapse, reducing craving, and curtailing drug-seeking behaviours in both preclinical and clinical studies, although some discrepancies exist. Due to its potential to modulate glutamatergic and dopaminergic neurotransmission, along with its ability to affect downstream signalling transcription factors and pathways altered by ΔFosB, N-acetylcysteine holds promise as a potential treatment strategy for preventing relapse to substance use. Nevertheless, a more extensive body of both preclinical and clinical research is warranted to establish its efficacy and unravel the elusive mechanisms underlying its effects. Its well-tolerated nature, safety profile, and accessibility make it an ideal candidate for patients with substance use disorder who are already at risk of toxicity and overdose.
Author contributions
SA drafted the original version of the manuscript and the question box, with input from MI & MS. MI contributed to drafting the manuscript, designed and provided the figures and the table. PHG, RGO, and GW offered critical feedback and contributed to shaping the revised version. SA and MI contributed to drafting the revised version. All authors reviewed the manuscript for the intellectual content and approved the final version for submission.
Funding statement
The authors received no specific funding for this paper.
Competing interests
Gregers Wegener is the Editor-in-Chief of Acta Neuropsychiatrica at the time of submission but was not involved and actively withdrew during the review and decision process of this manuscript.