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  • Małgorzata Frankowska
Małgorzata Frankowska

Małgorzata Frankowska
  • PhD
  • adiunct at Maj Institute of Pharmacology Polish Academy of Sciences

About

120
Publications
12,067
Reads
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2,556
Citations
Current institution
Maj Institute of Pharmacology Polish Academy of Sciences
Current position
  • adiunct
Additional affiliations
August 2003 - present
Polish Academy of Sciences
Position
  • adiunct
Education
October 1997 - June 2002
Jagiellonian University
Field of study
  • Biology

Publications

Publications (120)
Article
Full-text available
Background Maternal high-fat diet (HFD) during pregnancy and lactation induces depression- like phenotype and provokes myelin-related changes in rat offspring in the prefrontal cortex (PFCTX), which persist even to adulthood. Objective Due to the plasticity of the developing brain, it was decided to analyze whether depressionlike phenotype and mye...
Chapter
Υ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) type-B (GABAB) receptors and their positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) are indicated as potential pharmacological tools for use in the treatment of a series of brain disorders, including substance use disorder (SUD). This chapter describes the current state of preclinical findings on (i) the interaction of drugs of abus...
Article
Cocaine use disorder (CUD) remains a severe health problem with no effective pharmacological therapy. One of the potential pharmacological strategies for CUD pharmacotherapy includes manipulations of the brain glutamatergic (Glu) system which is particularly involved in drug withdrawal and relapse. Previous research indicated a pivotal role of iono...
Article
Full-text available
In accordance with the developmental origins of health and disease, early-life environmental exposures, such as maternal diet, can enhance the probability and gravity of health concerns in their offspring in the future. Over the past few years, compelling evidence has emerged suggesting that prenatal exposure to a maternal high-fat diet (HFD) could...
Article
Full-text available
Previous studies have indicated that acute treatment with the monoamine stabilizer OSU-6162 (5 mg/kg), which has a high affinity for Sigma1R, significantly increased the density of accumbal shell D2R-Sigma1R and A2AR-D2R heteroreceptor complexes following cocaine self-administration. Ex vivo studies using the A2AR agonist CGS21680 also suggested th...
Article
Full-text available
The lack of selective pharmacological tools has limited the full unraveling of G protein-coupled receptor 18 (GPR18) functions. The present study was aimed at discovering the activities of three novel preferential or selective GPR18 ligands, one agonist (PSB-KK-1415) and two antagonists (PSB-CB-5 and PSB-CB-27). We investigated these ligands in sev...
Article
Full-text available
Background Epidemiological data indicate a high rate of comorbidity of depression and cocaine use disorder (CUD). The role of serotonin 2C (5-HT 2C ) receptors in the mechanisms responsible for the coexistence of depression and CUD was not investigated. Methods We combined bilateral olfactory bulbectomy (OBX), an animal model of depression, with i...
Article
Full-text available
Recent years have provided more and more evidence confirming the important role of Wnt/β-catenin signaling in the pathophysiology of mental illnesses, including cocaine use disorder. High relapse rates, which is a hallmark of drug addiction, prompt the study of changes in Wnt signaling elements (Wnt5a, Wnt7b, and Ctnnb1) in the motivational aspects...
Preprint
Full-text available
Epidemiological data indicate a high rate of comorbidity of depression and cocaine use disorder (CUD). The role of 5-HT2C receptors in the mechanisms responsible for the coexistence of CUD and depression has not been investigated. Here, we combined bilateral olfactory bulbectomy (OBX), an animal model of depression, with intravenous cocaine self-ad...
Preprint
Full-text available
Epidemiological data indicate a high rate of comorbidity of depression and cocaine use disorder (CUD). The role of 5-HT2C receptors in the mechanisms responsible for the coexistence of CUD and depression has not been investigated. Here, we combined bilateral olfactory bulbectomy (OBX), an animal model of depression, with intravenous cocaine self-ad...
Article
Alcohol use, abuse, and addiction, and resulting health hazards are highly sex-dependent with unknown mechanisms. Previously, strong links between the SMPD3 gene and its coded protein neutral sphingomyelinase 2 (NSM) and alcohol abuse, emotional behavior, and bone defects were discovered and multiple mechanisms were identified for females. Here we...
Article
Neurochemical studies were previously performed on the effects of a 10 day extinction learning from cocaine self-administration on D2R and A2AR recognition and D2R Gi/o coupling in the ventral striatum. In the present study biochemical receptor binding and proximity ligation assay were used to study possible changes in the allosteric receptor-recep...
Chapter
Substance use disorder (SUD) is a chronic and serious brain disorder. Several drugs can lead to addictive behavior including psychostimulants, opioids, cannabinoids (CB), nicotine, and alcohol. Their behavioral outcomes are realized through distinct effector mechanisms, such as neurotransmitter transporters, ion channels, and receptor proteins. The...
Article
Full-text available
Mental disorders are highly comorbid and occur together with physical diseases, which are often considered to arise from separate pathogenic pathways. We observed in alcohol-dependent patients increased serum activity of neutral sphingomyelinase. A genetic association analysis in 456,693 volunteers found associations of haplotypes of SMPD3 coding f...
Article
Full-text available
The role of adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR) and striatal-enriched protein tyrosine phosphatase (STEP) interactions in the striatal-pallidal GABA neurons was recently discussed in relation to A2AR overexpression and cocaine-induced increases of brain adenosine levels. As to phosphorylation, combined activation of A2AR and metabotropic glutamate recept...
Article
Full-text available
Background Opioid use disorders are serious contributors to the harms associated with the drug use. Unfortunately, therapeutic interventions for opioid addicts after detoxification have been limited and not sufficiently effective. Recently, several studies have led to promising results with disulfiram (DSF), a dopamine β-hydroxylase (DBH) inhibitor...
Article
Full-text available
Substance use disorder (SUD) is a chronic brain condition, with compulsive and uncontrollable drug-seeking that leads to long-lasting and harmful consequences. The factors contributing to the development of SUD, as well as its treatment settings, are not fully understood. Alterations in brain glutamate homeostasis in humans and animals implicate a...
Article
Full-text available
Different neuronal alterations within glutamatergic system seem to be crucial for developing of cocaine-seeking behavior. Cocaine exposure provokes a modulation of the NMDA receptor subunit expression in rodents, which probably contributes to cocaine-induced behavioral alterations. The aim of this study was to examine the composition of the NMDA re...
Article
Full-text available
N‐acetylcysteine (NAC) is a well‐known and safe mucolytic agent, also used in patients with paracetamol overdose. In addition to these effects, recent preclinical and clinical studies have shown that NAC exerts beneficial effects on different psychiatric disorders. Many potential mechanisms have been proposed to underlie the therapeutic effects of...
Article
Full-text available
The widespread distribution of heteroreceptor complexes with allosteric receptor-receptor interactions in the CNS represents a novel integrative molecular mechanism in the plasma membrane of neurons and glial cells. It was proposed that they form the molecular basis for learning and short-and long-term memories. This is also true for drug memories...
Article
Full-text available
Keywords: Depressive-like behavior Fetal programming High-fat diet Maternal diet Offspring frontal cortex RNA-seq A B S T R A C T Environmental factors such as maternal diet, determine the pathologies that appear early in life and can persist in adulthood. Maternally modified diets provided through pregnancy and lactation increase the predispositio...
Article
Full-text available
Environmental factors such as maternal diet, determine the pathologies that appear early in life and can persist in adulthood. Maternally modified diets provided through pregnancy and lactation increase the predisposition of offspring to the development of many diseases, including obesity, diabetes, and neurodevelopmental and mental disorders such...
Article
Full-text available
Struggle with addiction to at least two substances, particularly alcohol and opioids, is a common phenomenon these days. Indeed, narcotic drug abuse people also suffer from extensive alcohol consumption, as this depressant strongly augments opioids intake. As it is thought that to stop drinking is easier than to stop taking drugs, the first step to...
Article
Full-text available
Cocaine induces neuronal changes as well as non-neuronal (astrocytes, microglia, oligodendroglia) mechanisms, but these changes can also be modulated by various types of drug abstinence. Due to the very complex and still incompletely understood nature of cocaine use disorder, understanding of the mechanisms involved in addictive behavior is necessa...
Article
Full-text available
Glutamate is a key excitatory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system. The balance of glutamatergic transporter proteins allows long-term maintenance of glutamate homeostasis in the brain, which is impaired during cocaine use disorder. The aim of this study was to investigate changes in the gene expression of SLC1A2 (encoding GLT-1), and SLC...
Article
Sphingolipids and enzymes of the sphingolipid rheostat determine synaptic appearance and signaling in the brain, but sphingolipid contribution to normal behavioral plasticity is little understood. Here we asked how the sphingolipid rheostat contributes to learning and memory of various dimensions. We investigated the role of these lipids in the mec...
Article
Full-text available
Cocaine addiction is a severe psychiatric condition for which currently no effective pharmacotherapy is available. Brain mechanisms for the establishment of addiction‐related behaviors are still not fully understood, and specific biomarkers for cocaine use are not available. Sphingolipids are major membrane lipids, which shape neuronal membrane com...
Article
The abundance of research indicates that enriched environment acts as a beneficial factor reducing the risks of relapse in substance use disorder. There is also strong evidence showing the engagement of brain dopaminergic and glutamatergic signaling through the dopamine D2-like and metabotropic glutamate type 5 (mGlu5) receptors, respectively, that...
Article
Full-text available
Cocaine-induced plasticity in the glutamatergic transmission and its N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors are critically involved in the development of substance use disorder. The presynaptic active zone proteins control structural synaptic plasticity; however, we are still far from understanding the molecular determinants important for cocaine se...
Article
Depression and cocaine use disorder represent frequent co-current diagnoses and the GABAB receptors are involved in both conditions. This research involved the application of the animal model of depression (bulbectomy, OBX) and cocaine use disorder (self-administration) to assess the efficiency of GABAB receptor agonists, baclofen and SKF-97541, on...
Article
Full-text available
Several psychoactive drugs can evoke substance use disorders (SUD) in humans and animals, and these include psychostimulants, opioids, cannabinoids (CB), nicotine, and alcohol. The etiology, mechanistic processes, and the therapeutic options to deal with SUD are not well understood. The common feature of all abused drugs is that they increase dopam...
Article
Full-text available
Recent studies have emphasized the role of the maternal diet in the development of mental disorders in offspring. Substance use disorder is a major global health and economic burden. Therefore, the search for predisposing factors for the development of this disease can contribute to reducing the health and social damage associated with addiction. I...
Article
Full-text available
Maternal diet significantly influences the proper development of offspring in utero. Modifications of diet composition may lead to metabolic and mental disorders that may predispose offspring to a substance use disorder. We assessed the impact of a maternal high‐sugar diet (HSD, rich in sucrose) consumed during pregnancy and lactation on the offspr...
Article
Full-text available
It was previously demonstrated that rat adenosine A2AR transmembrane V peptide administration into the nucleus accumbens enhances cocaine self-administration through disruption of the A2AR-dopamine (D2R) heteroreceptor complex of this region. Unlike human A2AR transmembrane 4 (TM4) and 5 (TM5), A2AR TM2 did not interfere with the formation of the A...
Article
Background: Several studies strongly support the role of the dopamine D2-like and glutamate mGlu5 receptors in psychostimulant reward and relapse. Methods: The present study employed cocaine or MDMA self-administration with yoked-triad procedure in rats to explore whether extinction training affects the drug-seeking behavior and the D2-like and...
Article
Full-text available
There is strong support for the role of the endocannabinoid system and the noncannabinoid lipid signaling molecules, N-acylethanolamines (NAEs), in cocaine reward and withdrawal. In the latest study, we investigated the changes in the levels of the above molecules and expression of cannabinoid receptors (CB1 and CB2) in several brain regions during...
Article
Background:: Environmental conditions have an important function in substance use disorder, increasing or decreasing the risks of relapse. Several studies strongly support the role of the dopamine D2-like and metabotropic glutamate type 5 receptors in maladaptive neurobiological responses to cocaine reward and relapse. Aims:: The present study e...
Article
Full-text available
Rationale and objectives Many studies indicated that adenosine via its A2A receptors influences the behavioral effects of cocaine by modulating dopamine neurotransmission. The hypothesis was tested that A2A receptors in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) or the prefrontral cortex (PFc) may modulate cocaine reward and/or cocaine seeking behavior in rats....
Article
Full-text available
The aim of this study was to evaluate changes in the expression of cannabinoid type 1 (CB1) and 2 (CB2) receptor proteins in several brain regions in rats undergoing cocaine self-administration and extinction training. We used a triad-yoked procedure to distinguish between the motivational and pharmacological effects of cocaine. Using immunohistoch...
Article
Full-text available
The repeated intake of cocaine evokes oxidative stress that is present even during drug withdrawal. Recent studies demonstrate that cocaine-induced oxidative and/or endoplasmic reticulum stress can affect mitochondrial function and dynamics as well as the expression of mitochondrial and nuclear genes. These alterations in mitochondrial function may...
Article
Full-text available
Chronic exposure to cocaine, craving, and relapse are attributed to long-lasting changes in gene expression arising through epigenetic and transcriptional mechanisms. Although several brain regions are involved in these processes, the prefrontal cortex seems to play a crucial role not only in motivation and decision-making but also in extinction an...
Article
Depression and substance cocaine abuse are disorders with a high frequency of comorbidity. In the present study, we combined bilateral olfactory bulbectomy (OBX), an animal model of depression, with intravenous cocaine self-administration and extinction/reinstatement in rats to investigate the effects of two antidepressant drugs, escitalopram (ESC)...
Article
Full-text available
Chronic exposure to cocaine in vivo induces long-term synaptic plasticity associated with the brain's circuitry that underlies development of repetitive and automatic behaviors called habits. In fact, prolonged drug consumption results in aberrant expression of protein-coding genes and small regulatory RNAs, including miRNAs that are involved in sy...
Article
Drug craving and relapse risk during abstinence from cocaine are thought to be caused by persistent changes in transcription and chromatin regulation. Although several brain regions are involved in these processes, the hippocampus seems to play an important role in context-evoked craving and drug-seeking behavior. Only a few studies have examined e...
Article
Full-text available
Background: In the cocaine addiction the development from transient into persistent neuroplastic changes strongly involves the glutamatergic system. In this respect, among glutamatergic receptors special attention is paid to the group II of metabotropic glutamatergic receptors (mGlu2/3R) which are involved in the transition from drug use to drug a...
Chapter
This chapter reviews the current preclinical research on the significance of central γ-amino butyric acid (GABA)B receptors in substance use disorder (SUD) and the SUD potential pharmacotherapy based on GABAB receptor ligands. We focused on the role of GABAB receptors in the effects of psychostimulants, opioids, and nicotine in various preclinical...
Article
Several behavioral findings highlight the importanceof glutamatergic transmission and its metabotropic receptor type 5 (mGlu5) in the controlling of cocaine reward and seeking behaviors. The molecular or neurochemical nature of such interactions is not well recognized, so in the present paper we determine if cocaine self-administration and extincti...
Article
Background: Abuse of more than one psychoactive drug is becoming a global problem. Our experiments were designed to examine the effects of a concomitant administration of 3,4-methylenedioxy-methamphetamine (MDMA) and mephedrone on depression- and anxiety-like behaviors and cognitive processes in Swiss mice. Methods: In order to investigate the d...
Article
Full-text available
Rationale: Chronic exposure to drugs of abuse changes glutamatergic transmission in human addicts and animal models. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is a cysteine prodrug that indirectly activates cysteine-glutamate antiporters. In the extrasynaptic space, NAC restores basal glutamate levels during drug abstinence and normalizes increased glutamatergic ton...
Article
Full-text available
Neurotensin is a tridecapeptide originally identified in extracts of bovine hypothalamus. This peptide has a close anatomical and functional relationship with the mesocorticolimbic and nigrostriatal dopamine system. Neural circuits containing neurotensin were originally proposed to play a role in the mechanism of action of antipsychotic agents. Add...
Article
Depression and cocaine abuse disorders are common concurrent diagnoses. In the present study, we employed Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats that showed a depressive-like phenotype to study intravenous cocaine self-administration and extinction/reinstatement procedures. We also investigated the basal tissue level of neurotransmitters, their metabolites and pl...
Article
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is well-known as a physiological mediator in the mammalian brain and peripheral tissues. Among several factors that change the concentration of H2S, oxidative stress and generation of reactive oxygen species, which accompany neurochemical actions of drugs of abuse, are of recent interest. Limited data on the connection of coc...
Article
In human addicts and in animal models, chronic cocaine use leads to numerous alterations in glutamatergic transmission, including its receptors. The present study focused on metabotropic glutamatergic receptors type 5 (mGluR5) and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor subunits (NMDAR: GluN1, GluN2A, GluN2B) proteins during cocaine self-administration and a...
Article
According to a current hypothesis of learning processes, recent papers pointed out to an important role of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), in drug addiction. We employed the Western blotting techniques to examine the ERK activity immediately after cocaine iv self-administration and in different drug-free withdrawal periods in rats....
Article
Being the centre of energy production in eukaryotic cells, mitochondria are also crucial for various cellular processes including intracellular Ca(2+) signalling and generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Mitochondria contain their own circular DNA which encodes not only proteins, transfer RNA and ribosomal RNAs but also non-coding RNAs. The...
Article
The acknowledgment was omitted for a reason independent of the Editorial Office. Below is the acknowledgment as it should have appeared on page 1532 (right column, above "References"): Acknowledgment This work was supported by grant POIG.01.01.02-12-004/009 "Depression-Mechanisms-Therapy".
Article
Background: It has been demonstrated that long-term exposure to cocaine leads to plastic changes in the brain that contribute to the manifestation of addictive behaviors. While attention has mostly focused on the meso-cortico-limbic pathway, the hippocampus seems to play a role in the craving induced by cues in drug addicts, in particular in cue-...
Article
Depression and substance-abuse (e.g., cocaine) disorders are common concurrent diagnoses. In the present study, we combined bilateral olfactory bulbectomy (OBX) with a variety of procedures of intravenous cocaine self-administration and extinction/reinstatement in rats. We also investigated the effects of N-acetylcysteine (NAC) on rewarding and see...
Article
According to a current hypothesis of learning processes, recent papers pointed out to an important role of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), in drug addiction. We employed the Western blotting techniques to examine the ERK activity immediately after cocaine iv self-administration and in different drug-free withdrawal periods in rats....
Article
Several clinical data indicate that depression is frequently comorbid with psychostimulant (cocaine, amphetamines) addiction. This short review summarizes preclinical results and observations showing how reward processes are modified in animal models of depression, and which depression-like effects are induced in experimental animals withdrawn from...
Article
Full-text available
The anterior and rostral paracapsular intercalated islands (AIC and PIC, respectively) were studied in the context of the amygdaloid modulation of fear/anxiety using horizontal sections. The structural analysis carried out using silver-impregnated specimens revealed that the AIC is composed of tightly packed, medium-sized spiny neurons with distinc...
Article
Striatal adenosine (A)(2) -dopamine (D)(2) receptor (R) heteromers exist with antagonistic interactions. We have studied these Rs and their interactions during cocaine self-administration and extinction using a 'yoked' protocol to understand the role of motivational mechanisms behind the adaptive observed. In the ventral striatum, a significant inc...
Article
Full-text available
Recent in vitro results suggest that cocaine may exert direct and/or indirect allosteric enhancing actions at dopamine (DA) D(2) receptors (D(2)Rs). In the present paper we tested the hypothesis that cocaine in vivo can enhance the effects of the D(2)-likeR agonist quinpirole in rats by using microdialysis and pharmacological behavioral studies. Fu...
Article
Drug addiction is a serious brain disorder with somatic, psychological, psychiatric, socio-economic and legal implications in the developed world. Illegal (e.g., psychostimulants, opioids, cannabinoids) and legal (alcohol, nicotine) drugs of abuse create a complex behavioral pattern composed of drug intake, withdrawal, seeking and relapse. One of t...
Article
Full-text available
The concept of intramembrane receptor-receptor interactions and evidence for their existences were introduced in the beginning of the 1980's, suggesting the existence of receptor heterodimerization. The discovery of GPCR heteromers and the receptor mosaic (higher order oligomers, more than two) has been related to the parallel development and appli...
Article
Based on indications of direct physical interactions between neuropeptide and monoamine receptors in the early 1980s, the term receptor-receptor interactions was introduced and later on the term receptor heteromerization in the early 1990s. Allosteric mechanisms allow an integrative activity to emerge either intramolecularly in G protein-coupled re...
Article
A single serine point mutation (S374A) in the adenosine A(2A) receptor (A(2A)R) C-terminal tail reduces A(2A)R-D(2)R heteromerization and prevents its allosteric modulation of the dopamine D(2) receptor (D(2)R). By means of site directed mutagenesis of the A(2A)R and synthetic transmembrane (TM) α-helix peptides of the D(2)R we further explored the...
Article
Previous studies have indicated that cocaine binding sites contain both high- and low-affinity binding components and have actions not related to dopamine uptake inhibition. Therefore, it has been studied if concentrations of cocaine in the range of 0.1-100 nM can affect not only dopamine uptake but also the quinpirole-induced inhibition of the K(+...
Article
The level of mRNA encoding calcyon (measured by in situ hybridization), one of the dopamine receptor interacting proteins, has been examined in the rat brain in the established animal model used to study the mechanisms of cocaine addiction (cocaine self-administration involving a yoked procedure). Two weeks of cocaine self-administration (maintenan...
Article
The present study was designed to find out whether pharmacological activation of GABA(B) receptors played a role in cocaine sensitization. To this end, male Wistar rats were injected with baclofen or 3-aminopropyl(methyl)phosphinic acid (SKF 97541), the potent and selective GABA(B) receptor agonists. The rats, which were repeatedly (for 5 days) adm...
Article
We tested if discontinuation of cocaine self-administration can lead to the development of depressive-like symptoms in the forced swim test expressed as changes in immobility, swimming and climbing behaviors in rats. A "yoked" procedure in which rats were run simultaneously in groups of three, with two rats received the passive injection of cocaine...
Article
Full-text available
Preclinical studies and clinical trials carried out within the past few years have provided a premise that gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) transmission and GABA(B) receptors play a modulatory role in the mechanism of action of different drugs of abuse. The present review summarizes the contribution of GABA(B) receptors to the rewarding, locomotor an...
Article
Full-text available
We examined neuroadaptive changes in GABA(B) receptor binding following reinstatement of cocaine-seeking behavior in rat brain structures using a "yoked" procedure and quantitative autoradiographic analysis. To estimate the distribution of GABA(B) receptors in several brain areas, we used [(3)H]CGP 54626, a GABA(B) receptor antagonist. The binding...
Article
We examined neuroadaptive changes in gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)(B) receptor binding following cocaine self-administration and its withdrawal in several rat brain structures using a "yoked" procedure and a quantitative autoradiographic analysis. In order to estimate the distribution of GABA(B) receptors in several brain areas, we used ([S-(R,R)]...

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