First Author | Zhao CS | Year | 2003 |
Journal | Exp Neurol | Volume | 184 |
Issue | 2 | Pages | 839-45 |
PubMed ID | 14769376 | Mgi Jnum | J:87266 |
Mgi Id | MGI:2683986 | Doi | 10.1016/S0014-4886(03)00346-7 |
Citation | Zhao CS, et al. (2003) Role of micro-opioid receptors in formalin-induced pain behavior in mice. Exp Neurol 184(2):839-45 |
abstractText | Intraplantar formalin injection is widely used as an experimental model of tonic pain. We investigated the role of endogenous micro-opioid receptor mechanisms in formalin-induced nocifensive behavior in mice. The flinching response induced by formalin (2%, 20 microl) was studied in mice with normal (wild type, n = 8) and absent (homozygous micro-opioid receptor knockout, n = 8) micro-opioid receptor levels. The flinch responses were counted every 5 min for 60 min post-formalin injection. Lumbar spinal cord (L4, 5) was harvested 2 h post-formalin injection to examine c-Fos expression using immunohistochemistry. The effects of naloxone (5 mg/kg, sc) administered 30 min before the intraplantar formalin injection on the flinching response of wild-type mice (n = 7) were also recorded. The second-phase formalin response (10-60 min after formalin) was higher in homozygous micro-opioid receptor knockout mice compared to the wild-type mice (P < 0.01). Naloxone administration in wild-type mice before formalin injection resulted in pain behavior similar to that observed in homozygous micro-opioid receptor knockout mice (P > 0.05). The c-Fos expression induced by formalin injection in the knockout mice was not different from that observed in wild-type mice. Our results suggest that the endogenous micro-opioid system is activated by intraplantar formalin injection and exerts a tonic inhibitory effect on the pain behavior. These results suggest an important modulatory role of endogenous micro-opioid receptor mechanisms in tonic pain states. |