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Some people are 'born smokers'

John von Radowitz
Sunday 30 January 2011 20:00 EST
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A discovery that explains why some people cannot give up tobacco may lead to new anti-smoking treatments.

Scientists have identified a brain pathway which, when defective, leads to an uncontrollable desire to smoke.

It involves a component, or "subunit", of a receptor protein sensitive to nicotine. Normally, the pathway dampens down the urge to consume more nicotine when levels of the drug reach a critical level.

But in some people the mechanism is faulty. The scientists, whose work is reported in the journal Nature, carried out tests on animals with a genetic mutation that leaves them without the receptor sub-unit. The animals consumed far more nicotine than normal.

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