Your Body's Cannabis System
Every human has an endocannabinoid system (ECS) — a complex cell-signaling network discovered in 1992 by Dr. Raphael Mechoulam and Dr. Lumir Hanuš at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The ECS exists regardless of whether you've ever consumed cannabis. It plays a role in regulating mood, sleep, appetite, pain sensation, immune response, memory, and reproduction. Cannabis works because it interacts directly with this built-in biological system.
The Three Components
The ECS has three core components:
Endocannabinoids — Molecules your body produces naturally that are structurally similar to plant cannabinoids. The two main ones are anandamide (the "bliss molecule") and 2-AG.
Receptors — CB1 (concentrated in the brain and nervous system) and CB2 (concentrated in the immune system and peripheral tissues). Cannabinoids bind to or interact with these receptors to produce effects.
Enzymes — FAAH and MAGL break down endocannabinoids after they've done their job, maintaining balance.
CB1 Receptors: The Brain
CB1 receptors are the most abundant G-protein coupled receptor in the human brain, according to research published in Pharmacological Reviews (Mackie, 2005). They're concentrated in areas governing memory (hippocampus), coordination (cerebellum), pleasure (basal ganglia), and thinking (cerebral cortex). When THC binds to CB1 receptors, it produces the psychoactive effects: euphoria, altered time perception, heightened senses, and appetite stimulation. This is why cannabis affects thinking and mood so directly.
CB2 Receptors: The Body
CB2 receptors are primarily found in immune cells, the spleen, tonsils, and throughout the peripheral nervous system. They modulate inflammation and immune response. When cannabinoids interact with CB2 receptors, the effects are physical rather than psychoactive: reduced inflammation, pain relief, and immune modulation. Caryophyllene, the only terpene known to bind to CB2 receptors (Gertsch et al., PNAS, 2008), produces anti-inflammatory effects through this pathway — which is why it's considered uniquely therapeutic.
Source: Devane et al., Science, 1992
Why Everyone Reacts Differently
Your ECS is as unique as your fingerprint. Genetic variations in cannabinoid receptor density, natural endocannabinoid levels, and enzyme activity all differ from person to person. A 2012 study in PLoS ONE identified genetic polymorphisms in the CNR1 gene (which encodes CB1 receptors) that correlate with differences in subjective cannabis effects. This is why the same strain at the same dose can feel relaxing to one person and anxiety-inducing to another. Your biology, tolerance, mood, diet, and environment all contribute.
The endocannabinoid system only exists because of cannabis use.
The ECS evolved hundreds of millions of years ago and exists in virtually all vertebrates — including fish, birds, reptiles, and mammals. Research published in Molecular Neurobiology (McPartland et al., 2006) traced the ECS back to the most primitive vertebrates. Your body produces its own cannabinoids (endocannabinoids) regardless of whether you've ever touched cannabis. The plant simply happens to produce compounds that interact with this ancient system.
Work with Your Biology
Understanding your ECS helps you choose strains, doses, and timing that work with your body, not against it.
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