Introduction

The addiction landscape in 2018

Only a small percentage of men and women who sample psychoactive drugs of any kind will develop an addictive disorder [1, 2]. The most recent data we have for use of illicit drugs by sex/gender in the USA is from the 2013 National Survey on Drug Use and Health published by SAMHSA [3]. The data are relatively consistent with those of previous years, in that for ages 18 and older, a greater percentage of men than women are dependent or abusing illicit drugs. Interestingly, the percentage of women has been constant since 2010 at 5.8 percent, while the percentage of men has declined slightly. This same trend is also seen in tobacco use (ibid). In this review we will be focusing primarily on sex differences in the behavioral effects of, and the molecular mechanisms of, psychostimulants (e.g., cocaine, methamphetamine, and amphetamine) and opioids (e.g., morphine, oxycodone, and heroin).

There are no sex/gender differences in the percentages of youth between the ages of 12–25 dependent on, or abusing, illicit drugs, which has been true since 2002. However, there have been sex/gender differences in abuse and dependence on individual drugs across the years [4]. For example, males (ages 12–25) are more likely to abuse or be dependent upon marijuana or alcohol, whereas similar aged females are more likely to abuse or be dependent upon cocaine and psychotherapeutic drugs [4]. In a recent cross-cultural analysis of sex/gender differences in substance use disorders, McHugh et al [5] concluded, “Although there is significant variation across cultures, in general, men are more likely to have access to substances relative to women; this difference in access appears to account for much of the gender difference in the prevalence of substance use. In other words, when controlling for access, the likelihood of substance use does not differ between men and women” [5]. Thus, sex differences in the absolute number of individuals using drugs is not key to understanding sex differences in addictive disorders. Rather. sex differences in the patterns of drug use and in the paths to addiction for individual drugs are more likely to provide information useful for treatment and prevention.

There has been recent attention on the extensive abuse of prescription opioid drugs and heroin by women and the subsequent increase in deaths of women due to opioid overdose. A recent review of sex/gender differences in prescription opioid medications and heroin use in the USA, from 2007 to 2014, found that the number of women using heroin is increasing at a faster rate than for men, even though non-medical prescription opioid drug use is declining for both sexes [6]. While some studies have found females at greater risk for opioid overdose, a recent meta-analysis suggests that the risk factors associated with overdose are complicated and not necessarily related to greater female risk [7, 8].

There are however, sex/gender differences in the reasons for initiating drug use and the path from initial drug use to being diagnosed with a substance use disorder. The best available data are for alcohol, but similar patterns are seen for other drugs of abuse. Self-reports indicate that many adolescent girls and women initiate drug use as a coping strategy to deal with anxiety, low self-esteem, depression, and feelings of isolation [9, 10]. These negative affective states are reported more frequently in women compared to men [11]. Prior sexual abuse and violence are more frequently reported by women than men with substance use disorders, including opioid use disorder, and this type of trauma is more predictive of substance use disorder in women [12, 13], highlighting the difficulty in parsing out effects of biology from societal norms. While some men also self-medicate with drugs of abuse, most report initiating drug use to be “part of the group” by demonstrating their willingness to engage in risky behaviors [11, 14].

Thus, in 2018 we are facing an addiction landscape characterized by decreasing sex/gender differences in the prevalence of drug taking behaviors and substance use disorder. Rather, the landscape is revealing sex/gender differences in the initiation, escalation, and withdrawal effects of drug taking behaviors. These sex/gender differences are compounded by the effects of sexual abuse and trauma, which tend to increase rates of substance use disorder in women to a greater extent than in men. Thus, to understand sex/gender differences in substance use disorder we need to better understand the neural mechanisms mediating addictive behavior in both sexes, and how developmental events impact the neural circuitry in both sexes. In the following sections we primarily review preclinical research conducted in laboratory models of addiction, which provide remarkable predictive, face, and construct validity to the human condition of substance use disorder.

Neural systems mediating reward, motivation, and addiction

Stages of addiction and overview of sex differences therein

The transition from casual drug use to substance use disorder in humans is influenced by a confluence of innate traits such as biological sex, impulsivity, sensitivity, anxiety, risk-taking behavior, and social and environmental influences such as socioeconomic status, education, exposure to trauma and abuse, peer pressure, drug availability, family drug use, and the social construct of gender. Despite these complexities, studies have identified neural circuits and molecular players involved in the development and maintenance of addiction. The development of addiction can be described as a three-stage cycle: 1. initiation/escalation, 2. withdrawal/negative affect, and 3. preoccupation/craving [15]. A key stage of the addiction cycle is the transition from initiation to escalation to compulsive drug use [16, 17]. One facet of this transition is the switch from drug taking as a goal-directed behavior to a compulsive behavior, which is thought to involve a shift from ventral corticostriatal circuitry involving prefrontal cortex and ventromedial striatum, to a more dorsal circuit involving the dorsolateral striatum [18]. Below we provide a brief synopsis of the major neural circuits implicated in these stages of addiction, with a focus on opioids (mu-opioid receptor (MOR) agonists such as morphine, heroin, and oxycodone) and psychostimulants (e.g., cocaine, amphetamines). Comprehensive reviews are recommended for more in-depth coverage [15, 19,20,21,22,23].

Clinical data support the idea that women who develop substance use disorders escalate from initial drug use to compulsive drug-taking more rapidly than men, a phenomenon known as “telescoping” [14, 24, 25]. Women also report more negative affect during withdrawal than men and have greater stress- and cue-induced craving and relapse compared with men (reviewed in [26]). Sex differences are also seen in rodent models of the different phases of addiction [26,27,28], highlighting the importance of in-depth studies in laboratory animals that can identify underlying neurobiological mechanisms. Although little research has been published on gender differences in heroin use patterns in humans, research in rodent models of addiction have shown that females acquire heroin self-administration more rapidly than males and show greater motivation to take heroin compared to males [26]. Interestingly, the same has not been found for the prescription opioid oxycodone: naive males and females acquire oxycodone self-administration behavior at similar rates, but males take significantly more drug than females during the initial acquisition sessions [29]. Whether these differences in male versus female rodent behavior are due to sex differences in the pharmacological responses to heroin and oxycodone or to differences in experimental design are not known. A take-home message from these types of disparate data is that although it is tempting to try to fit preclinical behavioral data on addiction-like behavior to substance use disorder in women, the preclinical findings do not always match the human condition. Rather than conclude that these preclinical studies of addiction are pointless, we argue that it is imperative for researchers to report the data from animal studies—regardless if they match the clinical condition—and then leverage the power of animal models to probe underlying mechanisms.

Initiation/escalation

The mesocorticolimbic dopamine pathway, comprising the ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens, and prefrontal cortex is consistently identified as a common neural substrate of all drugs of abuse [23, 30, 31]. Psychostimulants such as cocaine and amphetamine block monoamine reuptake transporters at nerve terminals to directly increase levels of dopamine and other monoamines, whereas opioids act on MORs in the ventral tegmental area to decrease the activity of inhibitory γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) interneurons, which results in a greater release of dopamine in forebrain regions [32, 33]. The last several decades of research have identified multiple roles for dopamine: it stamps in salience to stimuli in the environment, and it promotes behavioral activation and performance of goal-directed behavior [34, 35]. The time course of dopamine signaling is also a key factor. Rapid, phasic dopamine cell firing tends to code the experience of reward and determine the value of predicted outcomes of behavior, whereas tonic dopamine cell firing results in lower amounts of dopamine release that can facilitate and enable reward-related neural systems associated with motivational drive [36].

Dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area project to forebrain regions including the nucleus accumbens, prefrontal cortex, and amygdala (Fig. 3). The nucleus accumbens receives information related to hedonic state from dopamine and from neuromodulators such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), neuropeptides such as dynorphin (DYN), and from excitatory glutamaterigic afferents originating in the amygdala, frontal cortex, hippocampus, and thalamus [37,38,39]. The nucleus accumbens integrates this information and converts it to motivational action via connections with the extrapyramidal motor system.

Withdrawal/negative affective states

Repeated exposure to the acute rewarding effects of drugs can lead to escalation of drug intake [40], which causes a homeostatic impairment of the mesolimbic dopamine system. These homeostatic changes, described broadly as “opponent processes”, can occur directly within dopamine signaling pathways or indirectly within neuromodulatory systems that regulate dopamine signaling. Both mechanisms are thought to contribute to negative affective states observed during periods of drug withdrawal and abstinence. The homeostatic adaptations that occur in response to chronic drug exposure serve to oppose reward and, paradoxically, reinforce drug-seeking behavior [22, 41, 42].

One type of opponent process to chronic drug administration is engagement of extra-hypothalamic stress systems including increased activity of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and DYN within the extended amygdala [38, 41]. The extended amygdala, which is composed of the central nucleus of the amygdala, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, and a medial portion of the nucleus accumbens shell, represents a common anatomical substrate that integrates stress and reward systems to produce drug withdrawal-induced negative affective states and promote negative reinforcement processes associated with the development of addiction.

Preoccupation/craving/relapse

Craving is difficult to study in animal models as it is a highly subjective, emotion-based state. Recent advances in neuroimaging techniques and ecological momentary assessment approaches to studying craving and drug use episodes in real time in individuals with substance use disorders have shown that drug-cue and stress-induced craving for cocaine and opiates activates regions of the prefrontal cortex, amygdala, hippocampus, insula, and the ventral tegmental area [43]. In human studies, cocaine-dependent females show greater reactivity in these brain regions to stress and drug cues during drug craving whereas cocaine-dependent males show greater responses to drug cues [44].

The phenomenon of relapse is well modeled in laboratory animals using the reinstatement procedure [45]. Evidence from animal studies suggests that neural circuit changes associated with drug-induced and cue-induced reinstatement after extinction of operant responding for drug are linked to glutamatergic projections from the prefrontal cortex to the nucleus accumbens core, dopamine projections from the ventral tegmental area to the medial prefrontal cortex, and GABA projections from the nucleus accumbens to the ventral pallidum. In contrast, stress-induced reinstatement of drug seeking depends more on activation of DYN, CRF, and norepinephrine systems within the extended amygdala [46,47,48].

Origins of sex differences mediating reward, motivation, and addiction

Overview of sex differences

Historically our language forces us into a bimodal view of the sexes (i.e., males and females are “opposite sexes”), which has made it difficult to accept that complex interactions between biological characteristics and environmental factors contribute to the ultimate expression of traits that fall on a continuum ranging from “opposite” to “identical”. There have been a number of recent reviews that have described these interactions and the consequent expression of sex differences in brain and behavior [26, 49,50,51,52].

Considering the types of sex/gender differences is helpful when you have collected data and need to think about what it means for the neurobiological processes being investigated. Becker and Koob [26] described four types of sex/gender differences: (1) qualitative differences (traits are phenotypically different as typified by a bimodal distribution); (2) quantitative differences (sexes/genders exhibit different averages or means for a trait); (3) population differences (frequency differences in the number of individuals of each sex/gender that exhibits a particular trait) and; (4) mechanistic/convergent differences (the trait is the same for both sexes but the underlying biology differs).

Thinking conceptually about the neurobiological processes through which these four types of sex differences arise is helpful, as illustrated in Fig. 1. There are specific developmental influences that affect the expression of sex differences in the adult. The sex chromosomes, parent-of-origin inheritance of autosomal allele bias, fetal, and pubertal gonadal hormones and the placenta contribute to the sex-specific development of the brain [49, 50, 53, 54]. Applying this conceptual framework to the topic of addiction, there is evidence for each type of sex difference in the causes of, expression of, and consequences of addiction (see [26] for details on specific drugs).

Fig. 1
figure 1

Developmental origins, statistical characteristics, and functional expression of sex differences in the brain. a Developmental origins of sex differences may arise from organizational influences or be contingent on interaction with internal or external factors. Organizational origins are defined as genetic (XY /XX chromosomes), gonadal hormone influences during critical/sensitive periods of development, and placental influences. Contingent origins include internal or external factors that include epigenetic traits induced by environmental exposure, effects of stress in utero or postnatal, nutritional factors, etc. b Statistical Characteristics that describe different types of sex differences. These occur due to multiple developmental processes. Sex differences may exist in four forms, three of which involve differences in behavioral output: i. Bimodal Distribution; ii. Average or Mean differences; iii. Frequency Distribution differences in trait occurrence. The fourth form of sex difference occurs when behavioral expression of a trait is statistically similar between males and females, but the underlying mechanisms are significantly different. c Functional Expression of Trait. Traits may be expressed differently in females and males, or the sexes may show similar expression of the trait (by the measures used) but get to the trait by different underlying mechanisms (i) or via the same mechanism (ii)

The following sections are organized to first provide an overview of the types of processes (e.g., hormonal, genetic, and epigenetic) that contribute to sex differences in neurobiological mechanisms underlying addictive behavior. These processes underlie sex differences in every realm of brain and behavior and are not unique to addiction. However, it is necessary to understand the current state of knowledge on the origin of sex differences in order to understand how males and females differ (or do not differ) in the different phases of the addiction cycle. Second, this review then uses four key neural systems (dopamine, MOR, kappa opioid receptor (KOR), and BDNF) as examples of how these mechanisms have been shown to specifically impact addiction-like behavior in a sex-dependent manner.

Gonadal hormone influences

Overview of gonadal hormones

The hormones progesterone, testosterone, and estradiol are steroidal, lipid/fat soluble molecules that are produced by the ovaries and testes (i.e., gonads) as part of the same synthetic pathway (Fig. 2). Gonadal activity is stimulated by the pituitary hormones luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in males and females, although the exact details differ between the sexes. Estradiol and progesterone feed back to the hypothalamus and pituitary to regulate ovulation in females. In males, LH and FSH stimulate spermatogenesis and testosterone production to maintain a constant rate of sperm production. Importantly, estradiol is produced from testosterone (Fig. 2), in the ovary of females, and in the brains (and other organs) of males and females.

Fig. 2
figure 2

Synthesis of gonadal hormones. The primary gonadal hormones: progesterone, testosterone and estradiol are part of the same synthetic pathway as described in this figure. In females all steps of the synthetic pathway occur in the ovary. Since steroid hormones are not sequestered in vesicles they are secreted upon synthesis. In males, testosterone is produced by the testes. The dashed line is intended to indicate that testosterone from the testes can be converted to estradiol or dihydrotestosterone in the brain and other organs (e.g., skin) that have the necessary enzymes: aromatase or 5alpha-reductase (enzymes are depicted above enclosed in an oval). The brain is also capable of synthesizing progesterone, testosterone and estradiol de novo

Organizational vs. activational influences of hormones

The structure, circuitry, and signaling pathways of the brain are “organized” during development due to early exposure to hormones, chromosomal differences, and/or sex differences in the placenta, resulting in the different types of sex differences described in Fig. 1. If there are “organizational” sex differences, males and females are different all of the time, independent of concurrent ovarian or testicular hormones. In addition, the brain can respond to circulating gonadal hormones, and since the testes and ovaries make different hormones, sex differences may be due to differences in the “activational” effects of these hormones. Finally, the brain may be both organized differently in males and females as well as differentially activated by hormones (or other external environmental and experiential factors) in a sex-specific way.

Sex chromosome influences

In order to determine whether a sex difference is due to sex chromosomes or gonadal hormones, a line of mice has been developed where the testis-determining gene, Sry, normally on the Y chromosome, is not expressed and the Sry gene is inserted into an autosome [55]. This results in four possible sex chromosome / gonad combinations (i.e., the four core genotypes): XX (chromosomal and gonadal females), XXSry (chromosomal female and gonadal male), XY(chromosomal male and gonadal female), and XYSry (chromosomal male and gonadal male). The four core genotype mice have been a useful tool to differentiate the role of sex chromosome complement from gonadal sex/hormone exposure during development on neurobiology and behavior [55], although the underlying mechanisms are still not fully understood, which represents a gap in knowledge. Evidence suggests that sex chromosome effects can emerge in the placenta and affect X-linked genes expressed by the placenta that modify numerous proteins—including those mediating epigenetic processes—during fetal development [53]. Other sex chromosome effects emerge throughout development of the organism (and may themselves be a result of placental influences). Finally, sex chromosome effects may be mediated by Y chromosome-linked genes including those encoding SRY, histone demethylases KDM5d, and UTY (encodes a histone demethylase), whereas some are due to female-biased expression of genes such as that encoding histone demethylase KDM5c.

Autosomal influences

Both environmental and genetic factors contribute to addiction vulnerability [56, 57]. Most genetic variation in humans is attributable to single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). These are positions on a DNA sequence at which two alternative bases occur in at least 1% of the human population. Synonymous SNPs alter the nucleotide without changing the resulting amino acid (i.e., a “silent” mutation). Non-synonymous SNPs alter the nucleotide and consequently change the resulting amino acid, an effect that typically has a greater impact on gene expression and function than synonymous SNPs. Additionally, SNPs can occur in gene promotors, exons, or in intergenic regions, which may differentially affect transcription, transcript stability, translation, protein folding, and function of the corresponding gene product. A great deal of effort has been made to associate SNPs in human genes with diseases (including substance use disorder) in order to identify causal factors. Although many associations have been found, this approach has yet to lead to the hoped-for therapeutic revolution. Indeed, this is an area that requires much additional research, as 1.42 million single nucleotide polymorphisms have been reported in the human genome [243].

Sex-dependent parent-of-origin allele bias

Although not usually considered in the study of sex differences, the sex of the parent can determine gene expression levels and patterns, and hence behavior, in offspring. Recently it has been shown that parental allele bias—typically due to canonical or noncanonical genomic imprinting [58]—can be preferentially expressed in one sex over the other in the offspring [54]. Parental bias has been demonstrated in a brain region-specific manner for the expression of several genes expressed in neural systems associated with feeding and motivated behaviors, which has strong implications for sex differences in addiction. Interestingly, there appears to be a preferential maternal contribution to gene expression in the developing brain and a major paternal contribution in the adult brain [54, 59].

Epigenetic influences

Acute epigenetic influences

Internal and external contingent factors can act on an organism such that sexually dimorphic traits are amplified or normalized. Epigenetics is one such contingent mechanism that links external factors (e.g., drugs of abuse, stress) to gene expression and function. Epigenetics includes transient, stable, and/or heritable changes in gene expression within mature, post-mitotic cells without alterations in the DNA sequence [60, 61]. There are three primary epigenetic mechanisms: DNA methylation, histone post-translational modifications, and gene regulation by small non-coding RNAs.

DNA methylation occurs via a family of DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) that primarily hypermethylate DNA at cytosine residues found in dinucleotide CpG sites. DNA methylation is involved in genomic imprinting, which is a process that allows for the selective (or biased) expression of only one parental allele in the offspring [62]. DNMTs methylate newly synthesized DNA strands to reproduce the DNA methylation pattern on the daughter cells [63], which allows methylation patterns to be maintained through mitosis. Hormones can modulate CpG methylation, with one example being that estradiol treatment significantly reduces the number of fully methylated sites, predominantly in intragenic regions, where DNA methylation is highest (for review, see ref. [64].

Histone post-translational modifications are mediated by histone deacetylases (HDACs) and histone acetylases (HATs). HDACs remove acetyl groups from lysine residues and thereby tighten the chromatin structure and reduce transcription, whereas HATs add acetyl groups to lysine residues and weaken the electric charge between histones and DNA [65]. This relaxes the tightly wound chromatin and is associated with increased gene expression.

Non-coding RNAs are a more recently discovered epigenetic mechanism. These include microRNAs (miRNAs), which are a class of non-protein coding RNA transcripts (19–24 nucleotides in length) that are highly expressed in the brain [66] and regulate gene expression at the post-transcriptional level [67]. Each miRNA targets ~200 mRNA transcripts [68] with diverse effects on gene expression including mRNA degradation, increased mRNA translation, chromatin remodeling, and DNA methylation [69]. Although RNAs were initially thought to be absent in the germline, more recent evidence shows that multiple populations of RNAs exist in sperm and oocytes [70], providing a method for the transfer of the epigenome to the offspring. There is evidence for significant sex differences in miRNA expression and function. It was shown that of 250 miRNAs assessed in neonatal mouse brain, approximately 2/3 were expressed at different levels in males and females [71]. Of the miRNAs that differed by sex, half of them were due to gonadal steroid regulation and a third were due to bias in the sex chromosomes.

Importantly, all of the above processes are closely intertwined and can influence addiction in a sex-dependent manner as described in the next sections. For in-depth reviews of epigenetic mechanisms in the context of addiction (that do not specifically address sex as a biological variable) [72,73,74,75]. Furthermore, changes in histone modifications (e.g., acetylation, methylation) are necessary for DNA methylation and demethylation to occur [76]. Likewise, DNA methylation can regulate miRNA expression [77], and miRNAs can target mRNAs encoding histone-modifying enzymes such as HDACs, HATs, and methyltransferases [78]. Finally, each type of epigenetic mechanism can be regulated by sex: by sex chromosomes, gonadal hormones, or placental influences. For comprehensive reviews of these topics [53, 64]. An example of a tantalizing, but as yet unexplained, finding is that from Vilain and colleagues [79], who conducted genome-wide scanning of sex differences in methylation profiles of genes in the striatum and hypothalamus of neonatal and adult male and female rats. They found over 1000 genes that were differentially methylated in the striatum of adult, but not neonatal, males and females. They found sex differences where genes were methylated in one sex and not the other (bimodal distribution) and where one sex expressed methylation of a gene to a greater extent than the other (average/mean difference). With only two individuals from each cohort analyzed, they were not powered to test whether there were differences in the frequency of methylation of individual genes in males vs. females (population differences). Understanding the functional significance of these different patterns of gene methylation is a gap in knowledge, as gene expression in the striatum is likely involved in processing information related to motivated behavior, disruption of which is a pillar of addiction.

Multigenerational and transgenerational epigenetic influences

Multigenerational inheritance derives from direct exposure to the drug. Thus, drug exposure in F0 males or females prior to pregnancy can have a direct impact on the germ cells, which go on to produce the F1 generation. Therefore, phenotypes found in F0 and F1 animals are considered multigenerational. In contrast, only those traits that persist into the F2 generation and beyond, which are not directly exposed to drug, are considered examples of transgenerational inheritance. This distinction is important for assessing the mechanisms underlying sex-dependent parent-of-origin epigenetic transmission [80] and impact on addiction vulnerability.

Epigenetic multigenerational or transgenerational inheritance is defined as “germline-mediated inheritance of epigenetic information between generations in the absence of direct environmental influences that leads to phenotypic variation” [81]. This phenomenon has been studied in great detail with regards to X chromosome inactivation, but more recent pioneering work by Gregg et al. [54, 58, 59] has shown that imprinted genes inherited from maternal or paternal origin can be dependent on the sex of the offspring as well. By comparing parent-of-origin allelic gene expression within the hypothalamus and cortex of mice, they identified over 300 autosomal genes with sex-specific imprinting features [54]. At the molecular level, this is a striking example of how the same parents, environment, and gestational experience can yield significantly different outcomes in gene expression in sibling offspring that may predict long-term sex differences in disease risk and resilience. To date, there is still little known about how the sex of the parent and/or offspring in combination with environmental exposures such as drugs of abuse or stress directly contributes to drug addiction. Tantalizingly, aminergic systems and neural systems associated with feeding and motivated behaviors constituted the largest source of imprinting hotspots [59], providing a strong rationale for further study of these mechanisms in addiction models.

Organizational and contingent factors interact

The mechanisms described above interact at every developmental level—from preconception through gestation and through the lifespan—to produce sex-dependent traits that can contribute to both addiction risk or resilience and to behavioral manifestations in each of the three main stages of addiction. It is essential to understand that these sex-dependent mechanisms more often than not result in normalizing behavioral outputs between males and females. As such, males and females typically do not drastically differ in their behavioral responses to drugs of abuse. However, given that the underlying molecular and genetic mechanisms producing behavior can be different between the sexes, it behooves us to conduct our experiments in both males and females as we drill down into mechanistic understanding of addiction.

The following sections apply this framework for sex/gender differences to focus on four neural systems that are known to be key players in addictive processes: dopamine, MORs, dynorphin (DYN)/KORs, and BDNF. Figure 3 is a highly simplified schematic of how these players overlap within neural circuitry related to reward and addictive behavior, while simultaneously showing the location of estrogen and androgen receptors. Implicit in this figure is the caveat that the data supporting the specific involvement of these neural circuits in reward and motivated behavior was collected almost exclusively in males. Our goal is to describe what is currently known about links between sex differences and addictive behavior (focusing on opioids and psychostimulants) in each of these systems within the conceptual framework of the organizational and contingent mechanisms described above. Our goal is not to provide comprehensive coverage of these mechanisms and processes—we think this issue of Neuropsychopharmacology reviews will satisfy that. Rather, we are focusing on what is currently known in the addiction space. In some instances there are no published studies (to our knowledge) directly linking a particular sex-dependent mechanism with substance use disorder per se. However, there is strong evidence for sex differences in the developmental origin and expression of the neural systems that could enable sex differences in addictive behavior. Our hope is that this review will highlight these gaps in knowledge and stimulate experiments to fill the gaps, which will ultimately translate to more effective, sex-specific preventative measures and treatments for addiction.

Fig. 3
figure 3

Simplified neuroanatomical framework for major interactions between the four key players discussed in the section “Key players” (dopamine, DYN/KOR, MOR, and BDNF—data collected primarily from male rodents) and gonadal hormone receptors (data collected from females (ERα estradiol receptor alpha, ERβ estradiol receptor beta) or males (AR androgen receptor)) within neural circuitry implicated in addictive processes. Note that both males and females can produce testosterone and estradiol, although the divergent effects of these steroid hormones are mediated, in part, by sex differences in the levels and distribution of their cognate receptors [235]. Connections among brain regions utilizing the neuromodulators (dopamine, DYN, BDNF) are indicated when known [15, 184, 236, 237, 241, 242]. KOR and MOR receptor expression is indicated when known [160]. Gonadal hormone receptor expression is indicated when known [90, 91, 94, 238, 239]. AMG amygdala, AR androgen receptor, BIA basolateral nucleus of the amygdala, BDNF brain-derived neurotrophic factor, BNST bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, CeA central nucleus of the amygdala, ERα estradiol receptor alpha, ERβ estradiol receptor beta, HIP hippocampus, KOR kappa opioid receptor, LC locus coeruleus, MOR mu-opioid receptor, NAc nucleus accumbens, PFC prefrontal cortex, VTA ventral tegmental area

Key players

Dopamine

The mesocorticolimbic dopamine system is inextricably involved with each phase of the addiction cycle [35]. At numerous points in dopamine signaling, including synthesis, release, reuptake, and postsynaptic responses, there are examples of sex-dependent effects that can be—but are not always—related to circulating gonadal hormone modulation. We discuss below and have graphically summarized known sex-dependent mechanisms underlying dopamine signaling in Fig. 4.

Fig. 4
figure 4

Simplified composite schematic of organizational and contingent mechanisms leading to sex differences in dopaminergic signaling within limbic brain regions. To be inclusive, the figure collapses data from ventral tegmental area → nucleus accumbens and prefrontal cortex. Known distinctions between these projections are indicated in this figure legend and in the figure. The information in this figure is based on work reported in the section “Dopamine”, which is meant to highlight research that demonstrates preclinical connections to psychostimulant and/or opioid addiction-related behaviors. [1] In embryonic mice, sex chromosome complement, but not gonadal sex, determines TH expression in midbrain dopamine neurons. Chromosomal males have greater TH expression than chromosomal females, regardless of gonadal hormones [119]. [2] ERβ is co-localized in TH-expressing neurons of the ventral tegmental area in adult males and females and is thought to stimulate TH expression in females [124]. [3] In adult males, ARs and SRY are necessary for maintenance of TH expression. SRY knockdown decreases TH expression in males, but not females [120]. [4] Females have a higher ratio of dopaminergic to non-dopaminergic neurons projecting from the ventral tegmental area to the prefrontal cortex [96]. Whether this is true for projections to the nucleus accumbens is not known. [5] There is a maternal allele bias in the Th gene in select brain regions, not including the ventral tegmental area [58]. [6] Estradiol increases dopamine release in the striatum of females only, and it requires a lack of testosterone exposure during development [87, 88]. [7] At baseline, there are higher extracellular dopamine levels in the male, compared to the female, striatum [98, 240]. However, baseline ventral tegmental area activity and phasic dopamine release is similar between the sexes in the nucleus accumbens [118]. Electrically stimulated phasic dopamine release is higher in estrous females (when estradiol levels are high) compared to males or females in low-estradiol stages [100, 101, 103, 118]. [8] Estrous-associated increases in ventral tegmental area firing and dopamine release increase phosphorylation of DAT at threonine 53 (Thr53), which increases the affinity of cocaine for DAT. This results in a greater cocaine-induced dopamine release in females during estrous [118]. [9] Males, but not females, over-produce D1r and D2r in the striatum early in development [84]. D1rs, at least, are pruned in males during adolescence via actions of microglia [86]. D1r and D2r are primarily localized to distinct populations of neurons, but for graphical simplicity in this figure, we included them on the same neurons. [10] ERα/β interact with mGluRs on neuronal membrane via caveolin to inhibit GABAergic nucleus accumbens medium spiny neurons. This decreases inhibitory input to dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area and allows for greater dopamine release [90, 94]. AR androgen receptor, DAT dopamine transporter, D1r dopamine D1 receptor, D2r D2 receptor, ER estrogen receptor (α or β forms indicated when known), SRY sex-determining region Y, TH tyrosine hydroxylase

In dopaminergic neurons, the enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) converts tyrosine to DOPA, and dopa-decarboxylase (DDC) converts DOPA to dopamine. Release of dopamine results in activation of D1-like and D2-like receptors (D1r, D2r) found both pre-synaptically (D2r) and post-synaptically (D1r and D2r) on distinct populations of neurons. The presynaptic dopamine transporter (DAT) is primarily responsible for rapid clearance (reuptake) of dopamine from the extracellular space. Consequences of D1r and D2r activation include a myriad of intracellular signaling cascades [82]. Numerous additional genes and factors modulate this basic synthesis pathway, and there is ever increasing data suggesting that sex plays an important role in their regulation and role in behavior [26].

Organizational influences and activational influences of gonadal hormones

Males but not females over-produce D1r and D2r in the striatum during development, and the receptors are pruned prior to adulthood in males [83, 84]. Neither the over-production of receptors, the pruning of dopamine receptors in males, nor the lack of over-production in females, is due to the presence of pubertal hormones [85]. A recent study has demonstrated that, in the nucleus accumbens of both male and female rats, D1rs show peak expression during peri-adolescence or early-adolescence followed by a subsequent reduction to adult D1r levels [86]. In this study, the mechanism underlying D1r pruning in the nucleus accumbens is sex-specific: in males only, elimination of D1rs occurs via microglia-mediated phagocytosis. Taken together with the earlier studies, it is possible that interactions between hormones secreted during the perinatal period and microglia work to regulate dopaminergic synaptic maturation and plasticity in a sex-dependent manner.

An early study showed that ovarian hormones regulate dopamine release in tissue from dorsal striatum of females, but not males. This sensitivity to estradiol is mediated by lack of testosterone during the early period of sexual differentiation and the presence of ovarian hormones at puberty [87, 88]. The same pattern of organizational influences of gonadal hormones on estradiol-enhancement of self-administration of cocaine in females rats has also been found [89]. Thus, there are active organizational influences of gonadal hormones on the ascending dopamine system in males early during neonatal development and in females during puberty.

The effect of estradiol in dorsal striatum of adult females is mediated by estradiol receptors (ERs) on medium spiny GABA neurons that attenuate GABA release, thereby enhancing dopamine release by a decrease in inhibition [90,91,92,93]. The Mermelstein laboratory has shown that ER alpha (ERα) and beta (ERβ) couple via caveolin to specific metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluR) in dorsal striatum to indirectly modulate dopamine release [90, 93,94,95].

Furthermore, there is expression of ERα, ERβ, and androgen receptors (ARs) in midbrain dopamine neurons projecting to the prefrontal cortex that is not only sex-dependent, but also dependent on the specific afferent targets [96]. Indeed, the ratio of dopaminergic to non-dopaminergic neurons projecting from the midbrain to the prefrontal cortex shows a strong sex difference: in males, about 30% of meso-prefrontal projections are dopaminergic, whereas in females the proportion is closer to 50% [96]. Whether this anatomical sex difference is hormone-dependent is not known, but it strongly suggests that the effects of drugs of abuse on dopamine-dependent behaviors involving the prefrontal cortex will be sex-dependent. It is also not known whether there is a sex difference in the ratio of dopaminergic to non-dopaminergic neurons projecting from the midbrain to the nucleus accumbens.

In experiments using in vivo microdialysis with ovariectomized (OVX) female and castrated (CAST) male rats, basal extracellular dopamine levels collected over 10 min are significantly lower in the nucleus accumbens and dorsal striatum of females compared to males [97, 98]. In females, extracellular dopamine varies with the estrous cycle [97] and is dependent on the actions of estradiol in the striatum. Estradiol acts directly in dorsal striatum to enhance stimulated dopamine release in OVX female, but not CAST male rats [97, 99,100,101,102]. In possible contrast to the above results using microdialysis, which provides a slower time course of extracellular dopamine release, in vivo and in vitro experiments in rats using fast scan cyclic voltammetry, which measures phasic dopamine release in real time, has shown that electrical stimulation of the ventral tegmental area and cocaine-induced dopamine release and uptake rates are greater in the female, compared to the male, striatum—regardless of estrous cycle stage, which may underlie the lower basal dopamine concentrations found with microdialysis [103].

There are also sex differences in dopamine receptors in dorsal striatum and frontal cortex [104]. Estradiol rapidly down-regulates D2r binding in the dorsal striatum of female, but not male rats [105]. In the striatum of female rats, estradiol also regulates D1r binding [106, 107].

Sex differences and effects of ovarian hormones on self-administration of cocaine and methamphetamine have been extensively documented [26, 108,109,110,111,112,113]. The sex differences in acquisition and the effects of estradiol to enhance the motivation to self-administer cocaine are due to both organizational and activational effects of gonadal hormones [89, 114]. In studies examining sex differences in the choice of cocaine over sucrose pellets, over 50% of females chose cocaine as compared to <20% of males [114, 115]. Subsequent analysis indicated that ovarian hormones no longer influence motivation for cocaine in females in which drug taking is well established, whereas the estrous cycle continues to modulate motivation for pellets [115]. Indeed, a thorough examination of cocaine dose-effect functions in intact, gonadectomized, and hormone-replaced rats found no effect of gonadal hormone manipulations when cocaine taking is established with a high dose of cocaine such as 1.0 mg/kg/infusion [116]. The authors conclude that behavioral training history, drug dose, and schedule of reinforcement are important variables in studies of sex and gonadal hormone effects on drug self-administration. Following extinction of drug taking, cue-induced reinstatement is greater in women than in men and sensitive to ovarian hormones in animal models [44, 117, 244, 245]. Thus, gonadal hormone-dependent effects on addiction are sensitive to the stage of addiction.

To probe more deeply into the neural mechanisms underlying the responses of males and females to cocaine, a recent paper from Calipari et al. [118] looked at the functional circuit mediating cocaine reward in mice. They found that basal VTA dopamine neuron activity and dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens is similar between male and female mice, except during estrous when firing rate and dopamine release in slices is significantly higher in females. In a novel finding, they show that increased dopamine neuron activity leads to increased phosphorylation of the DAT at threonine 53, which increases the affinity of DAT for cocaine. As such, cocaine-induced dopamine release and cocaine-induced conditioned place preferences are higher in estrous females compared to males and non-estrous females. Although this study did not directly manipulate gonadal hormones, they confirmed that estradiol and progesterone levels are higher during estrous in their study, and they found a significant positive correlation between estradiol level (but not progesterone) and inhibition of dopamine uptake, supporting the argument that estradiol is responsible, at least in part, for the increases in: dopamine neuron firing, dopamine release, phosphorylation of DAT, and reward-related effects of cocaine.

Organizational influences: sex chromosomes

Using the four core genotype mouse model, the Arnold laboratory demonstrated that embryonic mesencephalic neuronal cultures taken from each core genotype developed different levels of TH immunoreactivity depending on sex chromosome complement, but not gonadal sex (i.e., not hormones) [119]. Specifically, chromosomal males (XYSry and XY) had significantly higher levels of TH immunoreactivity than chromosomal females. This is broadly consistent with findings in adult rats, in which the number of TH-positive neurons was 20% less in the female substantia nigra compared to the male [120].

Additional work in humans and adult rodents has shown: 1. SRY co-expresses within a sub-population of TH-positive neurons in the human and mouse male, but not female, substantia nigra [120, 121], 2. In human-derived in vitro culture systems, SRY knockdown decreases TH, DDC, dopamine β-hydroxylase (DBH), and monoamine oxidase-A (MAO-A) expression, and 3. Using antisense oligodeoxynucleotides to knock down Sry expression in the rat substantia nigra causes a significant decrease in TH expression (no overall effect on neuronal number) and emergence of motor deficits in male rats [120].

When taken with the four core genotype embryonic mouse results, the data suggest that early developmental expression of TH is primarily hormone-independent, but adult expression involves, in part, induction and maintenance of TH by SRY and androgen receptors in males [122] and by estrogen receptors in females. Indeed, immunoreactivity for ERα, ERβ, and ARs has been localized to subsets of rat ventral midbrain dopamine neurons [123, 124]. Likewise, short-term administration of estradiol benzoate to OVX females increases levels of TH in dopaminergic neurons [125].

The Taylor lab used the four core genotype mice to demonstrate effects of the sex chromosomes on goal-directed and habit-driven behaviors. They found that XX mice (chromosomal female) showed faster food-reinforced instrumental habit formation than XY (chromosomal male) mice, regardless of gonadal phenotype [126]. Interestingly, these findings seem inconsistent with a separate study in which it was shown that after moderate instrumental training for alcohol reinforcement, XY mice (chromosomal male) became insensitive to outcome devaluation, indicating habitual responding for alcohol, whereas XX mice (chromosomal female) remain sensitive to outcome devaluation, indicating goal-directed behavior [127]. Taking these findings together, it is possible that sex chromosome complement affects habit formation depending on the reinforcer in both females and males. The neurobiological mechanisms underlying these behavioral outcomes were not investigated, but are likely due to sex differences in mesocorticolimbic and nigrostriatal dopaminergic signaling.

Organizational influences: autosomal

There is a maternal allele bias in many of the genes involved in dopamine signaling. These include genes encoding tyrosine hydroxylase (Th), dopa decarboxylase (Ddc), and transforming growth factor beta 1-induced transcript 1 (Tgfb1i1I; acts as an inhibitor of the dopamine transporter, DAT), and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1 C [Cdkn1c; enhanced maternal care during early life increases Cdkn1c expression in the maturing ventral tegmental area accompanied by enhanced survival of dopamine neurons [128]]. Of note, parental (typically maternal) allele bias is brain region-specific, and has been detected primarily in the arcuate nucleus, dorsal raphe nucleus, and locus coeruleus, but notably not the ventral tegmental area [58]. The functional significance of this depends on many factors, including which brain regions and cell types express the maternally biased allele and whether genetic or environmental perturbations of the mother modulate DNA methylation patterns and histone modifications of the genes. This complex mechanism allows for an infinite combination of individual risk/resilient factors that warrant further study.

Organizational influences: epigenetics

Parental (F0) cocaine exposure: In a mouse model of maternal cocaine exposure, in which dams were injected with cocaine during the second and third trimesters of gestation, significant epigenetic alterations were found in hippocampal pyramidal cells of the male offspring around the perinatal (postnatal day 3) and prepubertal (postnatal day 30) periods [129]. In neonatal offspring of cocaine-exposed mothers, there was a decrease in global methylation levels, whereas in prepubertal offspring, overall DNA methylation was significantly increased compared to matched controls. These methylation changes were associated with alterations in the expression of the DNA methyltransferases, DNMT1 and DNMT3b, in hippocampal pyramidal cells. Importantly, instances of both hypermethylation and hypomethylation were observed at both time points in the offspring following maternal cocaine exposure. This suggests that some genes are activated and some repressed by chronic maternal cocaine exposure. Although it is not specifically known how this multigenerational effect on DNA methylation regulation occurs, one likely explanation is that gestational exposure to cocaine altered the epigenetic landscape in the placenta that had dominant effects on the male offspring [53]. However, this remains to be directly tested. A second fascinating gap in knowledge is understanding the mechanism by which changes in methylation status vary in male offspring at perinatal and prepubertal developmental time points.

In the 1980s there was considerable concern about children born to mothers who were addicted to crack cocaine. Research demonstrated that while these effects can be subtle, prenatal cocaine exposure puts adolescents at risk for substance use disorders, with most studies finding males at greater risk than female offspring [130, 131]. There are also effects of prenatal cocaine exposure on the neurochemistry of the brain and the behavior of the offspring that are sex-specific and depend on when during development exposure to cocaine occurs as well as when the outcome is assessed [131,132,133]. Following cocaine exposure to rats at a time equivalent to the last trimester in humans, there is a decrease in functional dopaminergic activity due to a de-coupling of the D1r from its second messenger system in the prefrontal cortex and increased serotonin transporter in the dorsal raphe and serotonin-signaling-dependent behavior of males but not females [133, 134].

When sires were allowed to self-administer cocaine vapor prior to mating, there were substantial developmental impacts on brain size, attention, and memory processes in the offspring, particularly in females [135]. Mechanistically, this study also showed that chronic cocaine exposure in the sires significantly decreased expression of Dnmt1 and increased expression of Dnmt3a in the germ cell-rich seminiferous tubules of the testis. Since DNMT enzymes are essential for generating and maintaining parental gene imprinting in germ cells, these findings suggest that paternal cocaine exposure may exert its multigenerational effects by interfering with gene-imprinting patterns in male gametes.

Although there are numerous studies, particularly from the Byrnes lab [136, 137], that explored multigenerational effects of parental opioid exposure, sex differences in direct effects on dopamine systems were not specifically reported. As such, this represents a gap in knowledge open to investigation.

Mu-opioid receptors

The endogenous opioid peptides beta-endorphin, prodynorphin, enkephalin, and orphanin/nociception comprise a class of naturally occurring compounds that bind to and activate one of four known opioid receptors: mu, delta, kappa, or nocicepton opioid receptors (MOR, DOR, KOR, NOR, respectively). These are 7-transmembrane, G-protein-coupled cell surface receptors encoded by distinct genes (Oprm1, Oprk1, Oprd1, and Oprl1, respectively). Opioid receptor genes are highly conserved in their 7-transmembrane domain, but not in their amino and carboxyl termini, allowing for different ligand binding ability and downstream signaling. Opioid receptor genes can also be alternatively spliced, have alternative promoters (Oprm1, Oprk1), and/or have alternative polyadenylation sites (Oprk1), all of which can lead to multiple mRNA isoforms (see [138].

Organizational influences and activational influences of gonadal hormones

There are sex differences in MOR receptor density in midbrain and dorsal striatum that are modulated by intrauterine position, suggesting that intrauterine exposure of female mice to androgens from males adjacent in utero has organizational effects. If a female mouse is between two females in utero, the MOR density in the midbrain is significantly lower than a male between two females (0 M) [139].

There are effects of estrous cycle on heroin self-administration, with females reducing intake during proestrus, but exhibiting overall greater heroin intake than males [140]. Female rats also acquire heroin intake more rapidly than males [141, 142]. In OVX females, estradiol treatment increases acquisition of heroin self-administration and heroin intake [143]. In apparent contrast to results with heroin self-administration, it has been shown that male rats initially self-administer more oxycodone than females [29]. This sex difference in acquisition disappears after several days of self-administration behavior, with males and females taking similar amounts of oxycodone during subsequent sessions under fixed ratio (FR) 1, 2, and 5 schedules of reinforcement. The initial sex difference in oxycodone intake was not due to pharmacokinetics, as plasma and brain levels of drug were the same in both sexes. Furthermore, exposure to oxycodone self-administration did not disrupt the estrous cycle, although the effect of gonadal hormones on behavior was not directly tested. Taken together, differences in pharmacological profiles of different opioids may amplify or inhibit sex differences in underlying MOR signaling.

Organizational influences: sex chromosomes

Adult, chromosomal female (XX and XXSry) mice were more sensitive to both thermal and chemical painful stimuli than chromosomal male mice [144]. All mice were gonadectomized as adults, which removed activational effects of gonadal hormones as a potential mechanism. However, it is not possible to dissociate sex chromosome effects from effects mediated by the placenta since the placenta is determined by the fetal sex chromosomes and plays a role in mediating the effect of XX chromosomes on development [53]. Morphine had similar antinociceptive effects in the hot plate test in chromosomal females and males, although the absolute magnitude was greater in XY mice, which was likely a result of decreased baseline sensitivity to thermal pain in these mice. Furthermore, similar levels of tolerance to the analgesic effects of morphine were observed, regardless of chromosomal or gonadal sex.

Organizational influences: autosomes

A single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in exon 1 of the MOR gene (Oprm1), in which an adenine-to-guanine substitution (A118G) exchanges an asparagine for an aspartic acid at a putative N-glycosylation site, is common in persons of European (15–30%) and Asian (49–60%) ancestry. Genetic association studies suggest that the Oprm1 A118G genotype confers an increased risk of heroin use disorder [145].

A knock-in mouse model was generated that possesses the mouse-equivalent SNP in the MOR gene [146] in order to study the functional consequences of this SNP. Both male and female mice homozygous for the G/G allele showed decreased MOR mRNA and protein in numerous brain regions, including, but not limited to, the VTA, nucleus accumbens, cortex, and hypothalamus. However, there were moderate sex differences in DAMGO-stimulated [35S]GTPγS binding, which is a measure of MOR-mediated G-protein activation [147]. For example, male G/G mice showed significantly higher net DAMGO-stimulated [35S]GTPγS binding than female G/G mice in the cingulate cortex, striatum (including nucleus accumbens core), and amygdala, suggesting that—despite lower overall levels of MOR—male G/G mice showed a stronger response to the same amount of stimulation.

The mechanisms underlying these sex differences in Oprm1 G/G mice are not known but may involve interactions with gonadal hormones. It has been shown that, during proestrus—when estradiol levels are highest—female rats have decreased MOR immunoreactivity in portions of the periaqueductal gray (PAG) compared to males [148]. The PAG is necessary for morphine analgesia and sex differences therein. It is also known that the developmentally regulated and sexually dimorphic methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MeCP2) is involved in epigenetic regulation of the Oprm1 promoter [149], raising the possibility of differential epigenetic regulation of A/A and G/G genotypes in a sex-dependent manner. However, no studies to date have directly examined these possibilities in Oprm1(A118G) mice.

Interestingly, female, but not male, G/G mice failed to express conditioned place preferences to morphine, and morphine-dependent female G/G mice showed significantly reduced naloxone-induced conditioned place aversions compared to their A/A counterparts [146]. This effect was not due to a reduction in somatic morphine withdrawal signs in female G/G mice, as somatic signs were similar between A/A and G/G females. This sex difference is consistent with the finding that female G/G mice showed reduced MOR activation in brain regions known to be essential for reward-related and aversion-related effects of drugs of abuse [147]. Despite sex differences in morphine reward and dependence in Oprm1(A118G) mice, no sex differences were observed in heroin self-administration [150]. It is possible that the sex differences observed in the Mague et al. [146] study are drug-specific, or that the strength of the reinforcer in the self-administration study (heroin access for 4-h per day) overcame moderate sex differences in MOR signaling. Alternatively, since the neural circuits regulating place conditioning and acquisition and escalation of operant drug taking are not identical, the sex differences identified in Mague et al. [146] may be specific to those circuits. Regardless, these kinds of preclinical findings underscore the importance of powering human studies to detect sex differences.

Organizational influences: epigenetics

Parental (F0) opioid exposure has sex-dependent effects on offspring

A series of studies from the Byrnes lab [137, 151,152,153,154,155] examined the impact of adolescent morphine exposure in female rats (F0) on behavioral and molecular measures in the F1 offspring at different developmental times. One purpose of the adolescent exposure paradigm was to avoid direct modulation of the developing placenta and fetus. However, it was not directly tested whether pre-gestational environmental manipulations trigger cascades of molecular genetic events that ultimately impact placental function and fetal development. Dams-to-be were administered escalating-dose morphine for 10 days during early adolescence and then remained drug-free until mating in adulthood. The Byrnes’ lab’s behavioral findings in adult F1 females from morphine-treated dams relative to saline-treated dams include: anxiogenic effects in the elevated plus maze and the open field novel environment test; a more rapid induction of morphine sensitization; significantly enhanced sensitivity to morphine-induced conditioned place preferences; decreased morphine self-administration during acquisition and a reduced breakpoint when morphine was available under a progressive ratio schedule of reinforcement; and blunted morphine-induced reinstatement of drug seeking after extinction. Their findings in adult F1 males include: enhanced expression of morphine locomotor sensitization; increased sensitivity to the analgesic effects of acute morphine; more rapid development of analgesic tolerance following chronic morphine treatment; and (similar to female F1s) blunted morphine-induced reinstatement of drug seeking after extinction of morphine self-administration. Their molecular findings in adult F1 females from morphine-treated dams relative to saline-treated dams include: higher MOR expression, decreased myelin basic protein, and a slight decrease in the synaptic plasticity gene, Zwint in the nucleus accumbens, as well as a trend for a decrease in MOR expression in the ventral tegmental area.

The point in development at which alterations in opioid sensitivity emerge in male and female F1 offspring of morphine-exposed dams is relatively unknown. If significant sex differences are observed before puberty, they are likely not the result of circulating gonadal hormones mediating multigenerational effects in F1 offspring. Rather, the multigenerational impact on behavior would be due to early developmental effects that may or may not involve gonadal hormones. In support of this latter mechanism, it was shown that pre-pubescent male, but not female, F1s from dams who were administered morphine during adolescence had increased morphine-induced sedation and decreased morphine-induced corticosterone secretion, as well as significant increases and decreases in arcuate POMC and ventral tegmental area Oprm1 gene expression, respectively [151].

Finally, some effects of maternal opioid exposure were transgenerational, as they were found in the F2 generation. For example, F2 females of F0 dams exposed to morphine during adolescence showed reduced morphine self-administration—similar to effects observed in the F1 generation [137]. Expression levels of a number of synaptic plasticity genes were examined in the nucleus accumbens of F1 and F2 males and females. Although significant effects of F0 dam morphine exposure were observed on gene expression, neither the functional significance nor the mechanisms underlying the differences are yet understood.

There is also evidence that opioid exposure in male rats can have multigenerational effects, including significant endocrine alterations and enhanced anxiety-like behavior in both male and female offspring [156, 157]. Moreover, an acute bolus of morphine administered to males just prior to mating resulted in male, but not female, offspring with a significantly enhanced sensitivity to the antinociceptive effects of morphine [158].

Dynorphin and kappa opioid receptors

Dynorphins are a class of opioid peptides that arise from the precursor protein prodynorphin and act as endogenous ligands at KORs [159]. In the context of addiction, DYN and KORs are expressed throughout brain regions involved in affect, cognition, and motivated behavior, including the ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens, prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, dorsal striatum, amygdala, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, locus coeruleus, substantia nigra, dorsal raphe nucleus, and hypothalamus [160, 161]. KOR activation in these regions modulates motivated behavior and affective state [38, 162]. Within the mesocorticolimbic system, KORs are expressed on dopamine neurons, and activation inhibits dopamine neuron firing and dopamine release [163,164,165], most likely by stimulating KORs on dopaminergic afferents from VTA neurons [166].The human gene encoding DYN (Pdyn) contains four exons, as well as a noncanonical activating protein 1 (AP-1)-Iike site in its promoter region, which is a target for Fos/Jun trans-activation, as well as three cAMP response elements (CRE) elements, which are targets of CREB–mediated transcriptional activation [167, 168].

In males, activation of KORs produces depressive-like and anxiogenic behaviors [165, 169, 170], encodes the dysphoric component of stress [38, 171], and can promote drug-seeking behavior [172,173,174,175]. Likewise, KOR blockade has antidepressant and anxiolytic effects [176,177,178], attenuates aversive states associated with cocaine withdrawal [179], and attenuates drug-seeking behavior [46, 180, 181]. These findings are consistent with observations that KOR agonists produce dysphoric and depressive-like states in men [182]. Only recently has the effect of KOR activation on affective state been measured in females, and it was shown that female rats are significantly less sensitive than males to the anhedonic effects of exogenous KOR activation, as measured with intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS) [183]. The anhedonic response to KOR activation did not vary with estrous cycle stage or after castration of male rats, suggesting that circulating gonadal hormones do not modulate KOR-mediated negative affective states.

Although there is little direct evidence linking sex differences in DYN and KOR systems to addictive behaviors, there is increasing evidence for sex differences in the role of KORs in mediating stress responses and affective states in preclinical animal models [184]. Given the importance of stress reactivity to addiction [22, 38], this evidence may help us understand, on a mechanistic level, why addiction is experienced differently in men and women.

Organizational influences and activational influences of gonadal hormones

There is substantial evidence for organizational and activational roles of gonadal hormones in mediating effects of KORs [185,186,187]. The most straightforward manner in which gonadal steroids might influence KOR function is via transcriptional mechanisms involving steroid hormone receptor binding to estradiol or androgen response elements (ERE, ARE, respectively) found in gene regulatory regions [188,189,190]. For example, estradiol has been shown to decrease DYN expression in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus in wild-type but not ERα−/− mice through an ERE-dependent pathway [189]. There is also evidence that testosterone can regulate DYN expression. In castrated Romney Marsh rams, testosterone treatment increases Pdyn mRNA in the supraoptic nucleus and the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis during the breeding season [191].

A more indirect mechanism for gonadal hormone control of gene expression is through modulation of transcription factor activity. For example, the Pdyn gene contains cAMP response element (CRE) sequences in its promoter that bind the transcription factor CREB [167, 192]. Estradiol treatment has been shown to increase CREB phosphorylation at serine residue 133 in the anteroventral periventricular nucleus, resulting in elevated pCREB in approximately 25% of DYN-positive neurons in this region [193].

Organizational influences: sex chromosomes

Using the four core genotype mouse model, in which all 4 genotypes were gonadectomized to remove circulating gonadal hormones, it was shown that expression of Pdyn, the gene encoding DYN, was higher in the striatum of chromosomal female (XX and XXSry) mice compared to chromosomal male (XY and XYSry) mice [194]. Furthermore, XX mice had higher Pdyn expression than XY or XO mice, indicating that the sex chromosome effect is the result of differences in the number of X chromosomes rather than a factor on the Y chromosome. Although not completely understood, this is likely due to sex differences in the expression of X gene(s) that escape inactivation rather than hemizygous exposure in males of specific X alleles, because this study utilized mice that have identical X chromosomes [194]. The functional significance of higher striatal Pdyn gene expression in chromosomal females is unknown. First, it is not known whether this finding translates to increased DYN peptides, release, or postsynaptic function. Second, the impact of circulating gonadal hormones is unknown, as these were effectively removed by gonadectomy in this study.

Organizational influences: autosomal

Sex-linked polymorphisms in the Pdyn gene have been associated with increased vulnerability to develop substance used disorders [17]. Specifically, two SNPs, rs1997794 in the promoter and rs1022563 in the 3’ UTR region of the Pdyn gene have been shown to be significantly associated with opioid dependence in women but not men in a Chinese population, suggesting that these SNPs confer an increased risk for women [17, 195]. In European Americans, SNPs rs1022563, rs910080 and rs199774 have been shown to be significantly associated with an increased risk for opioid use disorder in both men and women. However, the odds ratio was higher in women compared to men [195]. In contrast, no significant associations with SNPs in the Pdyn gene have been found in African Americans [195]. SNPs in the 3’ UTR of the Pdyn gene (rs910080 and rs2235749) are associated with decreased DYN expression [196]. This raises the possibility that DYN is decreased in women with Pdyn SNPs associated with increased risk of developing opioid dependence. Future studies should determine why the association of these SNPs with opioid dependence is higher in women and also whether their presence can have predictive value in specific subpopulations of women.

Organizational influences: epigenetics

Although there is strong evidence for epigenetic regulation of Pdyn via DNA methylation and miRNAs within limbic brain regions [197, 198], and Oprk1 via histone acetylation (acetylated histone H3 Lysine9) in the spinal cord [199], there is no direct evidence (to our knowledge) of sex differences in epigenetic regulation of either Pdyn or Oprk1.

Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and TrkB receptor

BDNF belongs to a group of secreted homodimeric proteins that are critical regulators of cell growth, survival, and differentiation during nervous system development and play important roles in activity-dependent modeling of neural function in the adult brain (for review, see [200]. There is a large body of evidence implicating BDNF in both psychostimulant and opioid reward, reinforcement, reinstatement of drug seeking, and incubation of drug craving, as reviewed in [201, 202].

BDNF exerts its biological effects primarily through binding to the high-affinity tropomyosin receptor kinase B (TrkB) receptor as well as to the low-affinity p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR) [203]. Rodent BDNF genes encode eight two-part transcripts in which an exon that encodes a different 5′-untranslated region begins transcripts that are spliced to a major peptide-encoding exon VIII. A number of features of the rodent 5′ flanking BDNF genomic sequences fall into 2 clusters, with cluster 2 covering 3 kb of genomic sequence and providing the 5′ flanking regions for exons IV, V, and VI. BDNF containing exons IV and VIII (termed BDNF4) is expressed at high levels in the brain, including within neural circuits implicated in addiction [200].

Activational influences of gonadal hormones

The Bdnf gene promoter contains an ERE, and estradiol increases BDNF expression in the medial and basomedial amygdala and in CA1 and CA3 regions of the hippocampus [204]. Stress and estradiol interact in the regulation of BDNF in females [205]. In this study, stress decreased BDNF in the prefrontal cortex in intact female rats, but not males or OVX females. Further, estradiol administration to stressed OVX females increased BDNF levels [205]. These results are consistent with previous research showing co-localization of ER and Bdnf in forebrain neurons [206, 207].

BDNF and TrkB receptors may play an important role in sex differences in plasticity of affective and motivational circuits that influence addictive behavior. For example, there are well documented sex differences in the stress response of mammals [52, 208,209,210], and stress can precipitate the initiation of drug taking and relapse in humans and animal models [44, 117, 211,212,213]. Therapies that promote reduction in stress axis activity may need to be modified according to gender/sex since many activities that reduce stress and enhance BDNF are likely to have different efficacies for males and females, as is true for the effects of exercise on cocaine self-administration [205, 214, 215].

Organizational influences: gonadal hormones and sex chromosomes

The extent to which BDNF and TrkB receptors are influenced in a sex-specific way by factors during development has not been extensively investigated. In one experiment with the four core genotype mice, XY sex chromosome complement was found to be related to BDNF-related genes. Weanling mice with XY chromosomes had significantly lower TrkB expression in the basolateral amygdala compared to XX mice, but these differences did not persist into adulthood [216]. In this study it was also shown that mice exposed to testicular hormones during development exhibited lower BDNF in the amygdala compared to gonadectomized mice. Furthermore, neonatal exposure to masculinizing gonadal hormones results in sex-specific and region-specific effects on BDNF in the hippocampus early in development, suggesting that BDNF may play a role in sexual differentiation of the brain [217] in addition to a role in neurogenesis in the adult.

Organizational influences: autosomes

In a large human study aimed at identifying SNPs associated with vulnerability to polysubstance abuse, positive markers were found to flank the Bdnf gene [218]. Further analysis demonstrated that a dinucleotide-repeat polymorphism located close to the 5’ end of the Bdnf gene was also associated with drug abuse vulnerability. A common single-nucleotide polymorphism (G196A; rs6265) in Bdnf results in a valine (Val) to methionine (Met) substitution in the prodomain (Val66Met). This SNP has been shown to affect intracellular trafficking and activity-dependent secretion of BDNF, with Val/Val allele carriers having increased BDNF secretion [219]. The 66Val allele of the Val66Met polymorphism is associated with vulnerability to methamphetamine and heroin dependence in Chinese men [220]. Interestingly, the 66Met allele is associated with increased risk for anxiety disorders [221], a result that seems at odds with the connection between the 66Val allele and addiction.

A mouse model was engineered in which the human Bdnf Val66Met SNP sequence was inserted into the Bdnf gene [222]. This study showed that the Met allele is associated with increased expression of anxiety-like and depressive-like behaviors in adult females. Furthermore, the anxiogenic effects of the 66Met allele are most apparent during the stage of the estrous cycle in which estrogen has just rapidly fallen. Although neither the human nor the mouse studies specifically compared males and females, the results are broadly consistent with the evolving hypothesis that women and girls are more likely to begin taking drugs as self-medication to reduce stress or alleviate depression, whereas males are more likely to engage in risky behaviors that include experimenting with drugs of abuse [223].

Organizational influences: epigenetics

In a seminal study, Vassoler [224] showed that male, but not female, offspring of sires that self-administered cocaine for 60 d (the duration of rat spermatogenesis) prior to mating had delayed acquisition and reduced maintenance of cocaine self-administration, as well as reduced motivation to work for cocaine under a progressive ratio (PR) schedule of reinforcement. This was not a general reduction in motivated behavior or the ability to learn, as the male cocaine-sired offspring showed normal sucrose self-administration. Although this apparent “protective effect” of paternal cocaine exposure on male offspring seems to contrast with the common human scenario in which substance use disorders run in families, it fits with Barker’s “developmental origins of health and disease” hypothesis that developmental programming in response to adverse environmental conditions prepares offspring for these conditions upon birth and during development [225].

The multigenerational effect of paternal cocaine self-administration was due, in part, to an increase in BDNF transcript and protein in the medial prefrontal cortex in male, but not female, cocaine-sired rats [224]. The requirement for BDNF was demonstrated by reversal of diminished cocaine self-administration in male cocaine-sired rats with administration of a TrkB receptor antagonist. The study demonstrated an increase in acetylation of histone H3 in the Bdnf promoter of exon IV in both the sperm of sires that self-administered cocaine as well as in the male offspring, indicating that voluntary paternal ingestion of cocaine results in epigenetic reprogramming of the germline, having profound effects on medial prefrontal cortex gene expression and resistance to cocaine reinforcement in male offspring. A subsequent study showed similar effects in male offspring of female mice who were injected with cocaine during pregnancy [226], although BDNF expression was only increased in the adult, but not juvenile (postnatal day 16) male frontal cortex.

An unanswered question is why parental cocaine exposure alters BDNF expression in male, but not female, offspring. Given that paternal cocaine exposure specifically increases acetylated histone H3 (H3K9K14ac2) within the Bdnf promoter in male offspring, a likely mechanism may be related to the finding that neonatal males (at least up to postnatal day 6) have greater H3K9K14Ac in the cortex and hippocampus compared to females [227]. This sex difference is testosterone-dependent, as treating newborn females with testosterone increased levels of H3K9K14Ac to those observed in males. However; there are still significant gaps in knowledge, including how to explain that maternal cocaine exposure resulted in increased acetylation of histone H3 in male offspring only at postnatal day 60 [226]—clearly past the neonatal effects just discussed. One possibility that requires direct testing is that sex-dependent developmental changes in the methylation state of either the Bdnf promoter or ERα could increase or decrease the ability of Bdnf to be acetylated. In support of this, the rat Bdnf exon IV promoter contains eight CpG sites that serve as binding domains for methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MeCP2) [228]. In general, MeCP2 inhibits transcription through recruitment of histone deacetylases, co-repressors, and histone methyltransferases, all of which can act together to silence the Bdnf gene through chromatin remodeling [228, 229]. As such, the level of Bdnf transcription can be increased via decreased MeCP2 expression or increased dissociation of MeCP2 from Bdnf promoter IV. Interestingly, it has been shown that males express significantly less MeCP2 than females in the developing amygdala and ventromedial hypothalamus at postnatal day 1 [230]. The sex differences in MeCP2 expression were transient, largely disappearing by postnatal day 10. This raises the possibility that decreased MeCP2 expression in males provides a permissive environment for increased histone acetylation and BDNF expression. Consistent with this, maternal cocaine exposure results in decreased global DNA methylation in male pups at postnatal day 3 [129]. Two caveats of this study are that only male pups were used, and global DNA methylation was subsequently increased in older male offspring.

BDNF expression can also be regulated by ERα. The Bdnf gene contains an estradiol response element (ERE) that is thought to be responsible for both testosterone (via aromatization to estradiol) and estradiol effects on BDNF expression [231]. However, the effects of gonadal hormones on BDNF expression are complex and appear to depend on the timing of hormonal exposure, developmental stage, and the specific brain region. High levels of estradiol receptor alpha (ERα) protein expression are observed in the cortex and hippocampus at birth, but decline as animals approach puberty [232]. This decline in cortical ERα in the cortex may be due to progressive methylation of one of the six promoters of the mouse ERα gene beginning at postnatal day 10 in both male and female mice [233]. Taken together, these findings suggest that epigenetic marks onto the exon IV Bdnf promoter can pass through either maternal or paternal transmission and depend on the developmental stage of the offspring [224, 226].

Synthesis: how organizational and contingent factors can lead to sex differences in addiction

The NIH introduced new guidelines in 2016 for addressing sex as a biological variable (SABV) in NIH grant applications. Importantly, this is neither a mandate to include males and females in every study nor an attempt to force every lab to focus on sex differences. Rather, the discussion of SABV is now expected to be an aspect of rigor and reproducibility, and when both females and males are used, data are to be reported by sex, even when there are no differences. We hope that this review on known sex differences in mechanisms underlying reward and addiction will highlight two main points: 1. males and females differ significantly in many behavioral and mechanistic aspects of the addiction cycle, and 2. there is more that we do NOT know than we do know in the field of addiction. The majority of studies to date that specifically address sex differences in addictive behavior have focused on activational effects of ovarian hormones using different drugs, doses, routes of administration, rodent species, and behavioral paradigms. In addition, many studies have reported sex differences in behavior but provided no mechanistic explanations. This is a critical start, but we are ready to advance the field. We think that the more recent understanding of fundamental knowledge on genetics, epigenetics, molecular biology, and transgenerational mechanisms of inheritance combined with the energized drive to conduct studies that do not assume females are simply males with an “fe” tacked on the front will enable full understanding of the how, why, and when males and females are different (or the same). Only then can addictive disorders be successfully prevented and treated in the entire population, which—at the last U.S. census count (2010)—was 50.8% female.

We have taken the approach of highlighting four neural systems that (1) are critically involved in the addiction cycle and (2) have identified sex differences in the context of addiction. These are: dopamine, MORs, KORs, and BDNF. This is by no means an exhaustive list, but we think the depth of mechanistic knowledge about these systems within our framework is important and discussing each system within the context of gonadal hormones, sex chromosomes, autosomes, and epigenetics helps frame what we do, and do not know, and more importantly, provides guidelines for filling in gaps in knowledge.

Future research directions

Incredible research is being conducted on fundamental mechanisms underlying how males and females develop into sexually dimorphic organisms, and how environmental exposure and experience map onto this dimorphism to produce a spectrum of behavioral outputs. Great strides have been made in the specific realms of development, sex (reproductive) behavior, stress reactivity, and multigenerational, sex-dependent inheritance. As this review makes clear, some strong studies have been conducted linking these fundamental mechanisms to higher order behaviors and pathophysiologies such as substance use disorder. However, much needs to be done.

In our view, some of the outstanding biological questions that emerged from the framework of this review are:

  1. 1.

    What are baseline sex similarities and differences in dopamine, MOR, KOR, and BDNF systems at each mechanistic level (e.g., molecular, neuroanatomical, functional, behavioral)?

  2. 2.

    How do dopamine, MOR, KOR, and BDNF systems respond during each stage of the addiction cycle in males and females? Is this drug-dependent? Is it dependent on gonadal hormones (organizational/activational)?

  3. 3.

    What mediates sex differences that arise from sex chromosome complement rather than gonadal hormones? What is the role of the placenta in mediating these effects?

  4. 4.

    Why are so many genes in the adult striatum differentially methylated in males and females? What are those genes, and are there sex differences in function?

  5. 5.

    Are there sex differences in efficacy of pharmacotherapy treatments (i.e., methadone, buprenorphine, naloxone) for opioid addiction?

Finally, how might current knowledge and answers to the above questions inform our approaches to prevention and treatment of addiction? First, we must painstakingly determine whether findings in laboratory animals (under tightly controlled conditions) translate to humans. Second, we must operate outside of our comfort zones to test sex-specific treatments. There is already substantial evidence that current treatment practices and psychotherapies are not ideal for both genders [25, 234]. We hope this review has highlighted where there are gaps in knowledge and will help to initiate new research into the mechanisms specifically mediating addiction in females and males.