Addiction: The microbiome link

Microbiome researcher, JAX Genomic Medicine, Dominick Reuter photo
George Weinstock (left) at The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine in Farmington, Connecticut. Photo by Dominick Reuter.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse has made a $4M grant to JAX scientists to explore the roles of the microbiome and genetics in substance use disorders.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) has funded a bold new approach to understanding the biology of substance abuse, with a five-year grant totaling $3,967,656 to Jackson Laboratory (JAX) researchers exploring the role of the microbiome and genetics in substance use disorders.

Substance abuse takes a terrible toll on the nation’s health, security and economy. In 2015, an estimated 20.8 million Americans aged 12 or older had alcohol or other drug use disorders, while another 27.1 million people reported past-month illicit drug use. NIDA estimates the annual cost of abusing tobacco, alcohol and illicit drugs at about $700 billion.

A number of genes have been associated with addiction, and there is accumulating evidence that the gut microbiome — the vast collection of microbes that inhabit the digestive tract and interact with the host — plays a significant role in behavioral response to addictive drugs, as well as anxiety- and depression-like behaviors, many of which occur with addiction.

“This study will be the first to delineate the genetic basis of drug addiction by integrating host genetics and the gut microbiome,” says Evnin Family Chair and director of microbial genomics, and one of the world’s leading authorities on the microbiome. “If our hypothesis is confirmed, it is likely to lead to deeper insights into the mechanism of drug addiction and provide novel therapeutic targets.”

Weinstock and Jason Bubier, Ph.D.We are interested in physiological addiction genetics and genomics to identify new drug targets for treating addiction/overdose.Research Scientist Jason Bubier, Ph.D., an expert in mouse genetics and large-scale genomic databases, are the principal investigators of the new grant. Their studies will focus on the effects of cocaine, a powerfully addictive stimulant drug that hijacks the body’s natural reward system by increasing the levels of dopamine in brain circuits.

“Abuse of cocaine is a serious problem in America,” says Weinstock. “Cocaine is involved in more than a third of emergency-room visits for drug misuse or abuse. And because it shares characteristics with many other addictive substances, our findings could apply to opioid and other addictions.”

 Breaking the cycle of addiction, a deepening and deadly public health crisis.Addiction is a chronic illness, with genetic, environmental and social aspects. JAX researchers are at the forefront of understanding the genetic factors involved in individuals’ vulnerability to addiction. addiction-research

The researchers will take advantage of special, genetically diverse mouse populations developed at JAX. Bubier says, “The combination of the unique mouse resources and microbiome expertise available to us at JAX provides a powerful opportunity to examine the relationships between mouse genetics, the microbiome and addiction.”

Bubier works in the laboratory of  The Chesler Lab Researches the genetics underlying behavior and identifies relationships among behavioral traits.JAX Professor Elissa Chesler, Ph.D., director of the Laboratory’s NIDA-funded Center for Systems Neurogenetics of Addiction. Chesler comments, “The microbiome and metabolites that are produced by gut microbes are known to influence multiple behaviors in mice. To date, we have very little information on how gut microbes are involved in addiction, and this project is an exciting step forward in our effort to discover which aspects of host and microbe interact to influence addiction.”


National Institute on Drug Abuse, “Genetic Control of Addiction by Host and Microbiome,” Grant Number 1U01DA043809-01A1