Science & Health
Marijuana Compound Has ‘Anti-Aging Effect On The Brain,’ Study Of Mice Dosed With THC Finds
Authors of a new study on the neurological impacts of long-term THC administration say their findings “could be the basis for an effective antiaging and pro-cognitive medication,” noting increased energy and synaptic protein production in mice that received low doses of the chief psychoactive substance in marijuana.
“Long-term low-dose Δ9-THC had an antiaging effect on the brain by restoring cognitive abilities and synapse densities in old mice,” says the new research, published this month in the American Chemical Society journal Pharmacology and Translational Science, adding that the “results suggest that Δ9-THC-induced consecutive bidirectional changes [in the brain] may play a significant role in the positive effect of Δ9-THC treatment against brain aging.”
The study, which was supported by an organization funded by the German government as that country launches its new marijuana legalization policy, also sheds some light on the mechanisms that could underlie the beneficial effects of the cannabis component, though it acknowledges the cause remains “an open question.”
Researchers took older and younger age groups of male mice—four months old and 18 months old—and gave them either THC or a placebo for a period for about a month. Measurements included brain function as well as levels of proteins associated with things like metabolism, memory and aging. One of the main proteins analyzed was mTOR, which influences cognitive performance and a variety of aging-related cell functions across the body, such as growth and metabolism.
“A long-term low-dose Δ9-THC treatment could be a particularly effective treatment strategy against brain aging.”
In the brains of older mice, THC was associated with an increase in mTOR activity as well as levels of proteins that help form and repair synapses. Metabolic activity in the hippocampus, a region of the brain linked to learning and memory, also rose in older mice that received THC.
Outside the brain, THC appeared to produce a different kind of anti-aging effect. Fat tissue in older mice that received THC showed a decrease in mTOR activity as well as increases in fatty acids and other substances that help combat aging.
Authors wrote of their findings:
“Here, we have shown that a low-dose long-term Δ9-THC treatment leads to a temporary increase in mTOR activity and mobilization of energy resources, thus triggering the formation of new synapses. This phase is followed by a reduced energy expenditure and reduced mTOR signaling in the adipose tissue, probably due to the depletion of resources in the first phase. Through this mechanism, Δ9-THC treatment combines the pro-cognitive effect of an mTOR activation with the antiaging effect of mTOR activity blockade. Our data now suggest that a long-term low-dose Δ9-THC treatment could be a particularly effective treatment strategy against brain aging.”
Over the course of the 28-day study, the strongest differences in brain activity appeared about two weeks in, while the effects in fatty tissue appeared to peak at the end of study period. Authors said the “dual effect” observed on different types of cells at different times could open the door to the development of effective anti-aging medications.
“We concluded that long-term THC treatment initially has a cognition-enhancing effect by increasing energy and synaptic protein production in the brain, followed by an anti-aging effect by decreasing mTOR activity and metabolic processes in the periphery,” Andras Bilkei-Gorzo from the Institute of Molecular Psychiatry at the UKB, who is also a researcher at the University of Bonn, said in a press release. “Our study suggests that a dual effect on mTOR activity and the metabolome could be the basis for an effective anti-aging and cognition-enhancing drug.”
Notably, authors of the study observed that the age of the mice seemed to modulate the effects of THC. For example, authors wrote that in general, THC treatment generated polyunsaturated fatty acids, which they describe as “compounds with a well-documented antiaging effect.”
That was true in both younger and older mice, but the similarities stopped there. Observed effects of treatment “on the concentration of all other Δ9-THC-affected compound classes,” the study says, “substantially differed between young and old mice.”
Those findings are consistent with past research published in the journal Nature in 2017 showing age-dependent effects of THC on brain function, authors noted.
“Our previous studies showed that long-term low-dose Δ9-THC treatment has an opposite effect on the brain of young and old animals: Δ9-THC-treated old mice showed an improved learning ability and enhanced synapse densities, whereas the same treatment slightly impaired the memory and destabilized spines in young animals,” they wrote. “We now show that the effect of Δ9-THC on the metabolome was also strongly dependent on age: most of the compound classes influenced by Δ9-THC in old mice were also affected in young animals, but in the opposite direction!”
The new report points to a number of areas of further research necessary to explore and expand on the new findings, for example looking into differences in dosage and duration of administration. It’s also necessary to weigh possible anti-aging effects of THC against other, potentially detrimental effects of long-term use. Eventually, the study’s findings would also need to be replicated in human subjects.
A growing body of research into cannabis and the brain suggest that, despite worries over long-term risks, marijuana may actually offer some promising benefits.
A study on subjective cognitive decline (SCD) published earlier this year in the journal Current Alzheimer Research, for example, found that people who used cannabis for recreational or medical purposes reported less confusion and memory loss compared to non-users.
Past research has connected SCD to the development of dementia later in life.
“Compared to non-users,” it found, “non-medical cannabis use was significantly associated with 96% decreased odds of SCD.” People who reported using marijuana for medical purposes, or for both medical and recreational purposes, also showed “decreased odds of SCD, although not significant.”
Authors stressed that their results were not a rejection of past findings that frequent or heavy cannabis use may carry cognitive risks but instead an indication that more detailed study is needed.
A separate study last year examining marijuana’s neurocognitive effects found that “prescribed medical cannabis may have minimal acute impact on cognitive function among patients with chronic health conditions.”
Authors of that report, published in the peer-reviewed journal CNS Drugs, wrote that they found “no evidence for impaired cognitive function when comparing baseline with post-treatment scores.”
Another report published last year that drew on dispensary data, for instance, found that cancer patients reported being able to think more clearly when using medical marijuana. They also said it helped manage pain.
A separate study of teens and young adults at risk of developing psychotic disorders found that regular marijuana use over a two-year period did not trigger early onset of psychosis symptoms—contrary to the claims of prohibitionists who argue that cannabis causes mental illness. In fact, it was associated with modest improvements in cognitive functioning and reduced use of other medications.
“CHR youth who continuously used cannabis had higher neurocognition and social functioning over time, and decreased medication usage, relative to non-users,” authors of that study wrote. “Surprisingly, clinical symptoms improved over time despite the medication decreases.”
Another recent study published by the American Medical Association (AMA) that looked at data from more than 63 million health insurance beneficiaries found that there’s “no statistically significant increase” in psychosis-related diagnoses in states that have legalized marijuana compared to those that continue to criminalize cannabis.
Studies from 2018, meanwhile, found that marijuana may actually increase working memory and that cannabis use doesn’t actually change the structure of the brain.
And, contrary to then-President Trump’s claim that marijuana makes people “lose IQ points,” the National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA) says the results of two longitudinal studies “did not support a causal relationship between marijuana use and IQ loss.”
Research has shown that people who use cannabis can see declines in verbal ability and general knowledge but that “those who would use in the future already had lower scores on these measures than those who would not use in the future, and no predictable difference was found between twins when one used marijuana and one did not.”
“This suggests that observed IQ declines, at least across adolescence, may be caused by shared familial factors (e.g., genetics, family environment), not by marijuana use itself,” NIDA concluded.
Photo courtesy of Mike Latimer.