A Quick Overview of the ECS
Overview of the Endocannaboinoid System provided by CFH, Ltd.’s Clinical Science Director, Dr. Karen Hufnagl
What Is It?
- Master regulatory system – maintains homeostasis and balance in the whole body
- Extensive system with a web of receptors throughout the body
- Modulates and influences every single system in the body
- Functions as a pleiotropic signaling system – a single signal generates multiple responses in numerous tissues containing receptors
- Not discovered until the late 1980s/early 1990s
Comprised Of:
- Endocannabinoids – signaling molecules
- Receptors
- Enzymes that synthesize endocannabinoids
- Enzymes that degrade endocannabinoids
- FAAH (Fatty Acid Amide Hydroxylase)
- Monoacylglycerol lipase (MGL)
Endocannabinoids (neurotransmitters)
- 2 main endocannabinoids; total of 6 have been discovered so far
- Anandamide [AEA]
Partial agonist at both the CB1 and CB2 receptors; greater affinity for CB1 receptors

- 2-arachidonoylglycerol [2-AG]
Full agonist at both CB1 and CB2 receptors but with lower affinity than anandamide

- Synthesized and released from postsynaptic neurons through a retrograde signaling system – diffuse backward across the synaptic cleft binding to endocannabinoid receptors on the presynaptic side
- Arachidonic acid derivatives that are synthesized “on demand” based on cellular metabolic needs
- Modulate the release of neurotransmitters – help keep the body from being too over-stimulated or too relaxed
- Indirect effects on receptors:
- Serotonin
- NMDA
- Opiate
- GABA
- Indirect effects on receptors:
- Multiple signal mechanisms – act on cannabinoid receptors other than CB1/CB2 (i.e., TRP receptors)
Receptors
- CB1
- CB2
- Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ (PPAR-γ)
- TRPV1 receptor
- GPR55, GPR18, GPR119 (G-protein coupled receptors)
G-protein coupled receptors, TRPV1, and PPAR-γ functionally interact with CB1 receptor signaling
CB1 Receptors
- Primarily located in the central and peripheral nervous system
- Important role in cognition, memory, learning, emotion, mood, motor activity, pain and motivation
- Exist to a lesser degree in many peripheral organs (such as adrenal gland, adipose tissue, heart, liver, lung, prostate, uterus, ovary, testis, bone marrow, thymus, tonsils)
- Located pre-synaptically
CB2 Receptors
- Primarily in peripheral organs/tissues (including bone, GI tract, etc.) and immune system
- Modulate cytokine release (impacts pain, inflammation, immune function)
- Recently, CB2 receptors have been discovered in the brain as well – including pain pathways
- Located pre-synaptically
Endocannabinoid System Functions
- Hippocampal neurogenesis
- Memory
- Appetite regulation
- Homeostasis of energy balance and metabolism
- Regulation of the HPA axis
- Stress response
- Emotion regulation
- Modulation of the immune system
- Including gut immunity
- Female reproduction – anandamide regulates timing of embryonic implantation and uterine receptivity…if levels are either too high or too low, risk of miscarriage increases.
- Autonomic nervous system regulation
- Including gut motility, heart rate, breathing, etc.
- Analgesia (pain relief)
- Inflammation
- Thermoregulation
- Sleep
- Cardiovascular function
- Physical exercise effects – aerobic exercise (70-80% MHR) increases plasma anandamide levels – responsible for the “Runner’s high”.
- On-demand regulation of other neurotransmitter systems