Switching on a subtype of the receptor that binds cannabis, the active ingredient in marijuana, can suppress inflammation -- suggesting a new and particularly promising target to treat autoimmune problems such as multiple sclerosis and the damage caused by immune cells after a stroke. But hotly contested evidence for whether or not this cannabinoid receptor is expressed on neurons may limit the potential for pursuing that target in the search for new medicines.
A cannabis tincture from the
first half of the 20th century

Image: Wikipedia
Understanding the receptor's role in damaged neurons and autoimmunity "has pretty important therapeutic implications," said linkurl:Ken Mackie,;http://www.indiana.edu/~gillctr/mackie.shtml a neuroscientist at Indiana University in Bloomington who studies cannabinoid receptors in the brain.It's commonly accepted that marijuana's "high" stems from cannabis binding to one type of cannabinoid receptor -- called the CB1 receptor -- which is widespread on neurons in the brain. Scientists have tied CB1...
Microvascular ResearchScienceBrain and ResearchNew York Academy of SciencesBrain and ResearchGenes, Brain and Behavior



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