CNCR investigators discovered the mechanism by which adolescent nicotine use causes long-lasting disturbances in attention as appeared in this week’s advance online publication of Nature Neuroscience.
This is revealed in a Nature Neuroscience paper by CNCR PhD students Danielle Counotte and Natalia Goriounova.
Tobacco (nicotine) smoking is highly prevalent and particularly adolescents are at high risk to start experimenting with this drug. Recent studies reveal that adolescents are not only more sensitive to the rewarding effects of nicotine, tobacco use interferes with the development of the frontal cortical regions and hence leads to cognitive impairments observed in later life. Until now, the molecular and cellular underpinnings of these harmful consequences for cognitive function remained elusive.


Lasting synaptic changes underlie attention deficits caused by nicotine exposure during adolescence. Danielle S. Counotte, Natalia A. Goriounova, Ka Wan Li, Maarten Loos, Roel C. van der Schors, Dustin Schetters, Anton N.M. Schoffelmeer, August B. Smit, Huibert D. Mansvelder, Tommy Pattij & Sabine Spijker
Nature Neuroscience Published online: 20 February 2011 | doi: XXXXXXXXXXXXXX