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Publication : Stress-induced analgesia and morphine responses are changed in catechol-O-methyltransferase-deficient male mice.

First Author  Kambur O Year  2008
Journal  Basic Clin Pharmacol Toxicol Volume  103
Issue  4 Pages  367-73
PubMed ID  18834357 Mgi Jnum  J:323306
Mgi Id  MGI:7262799 Doi  10.1111/j.1742-7843.2008.00289.x
Citation  Kambur O, et al. (2008) Stress-induced analgesia and morphine responses are changed in catechol-O-methyltransferase-deficient male mice. Basic Clin Pharmacol Toxicol 103(4):367-73
abstractText  Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) polymorphisms modulate pain and opioid analgesia in human beings. It is not clear how the effects of COMT are mediated and only few relevant animal studies have been performed. Here, we used old male Comt gene knock-out mice as an animal model to study the effects of COMT deficiency on nociception that was assessed by the hot plate and tail flick tests. Stress-induced analgesia was achieved by forced swim. Morphine antinociception was measured after 10 mg/kg of morphine subcutaneously. Morphine tolerance was produced with subcutaneous morphine pellets and withdrawal provoked with subcutaneous naloxone. In the hot plate test, morphine-induced antinociception was significantly greater in the COMT knock-out mice, compared to the wild-type mice. This may be due to increased availability of opioid receptors as suggested by previous human studies. In the tail flick test, opioid-mediated stress-induced analgesia was absent and morphine-induced analgesia was decreased in COMT knock-out mice. In the hot plate test, stress-induced analgesia developed to all mice regardless of the COMT genotype. There were no differences between the genotypes in the baseline nociceptive thresholds, morphine tolerance and withdrawal. Our findings show, for the first time, the importance of COMT activity in stress- and morphine-induced analgesia in mice. COMT activity seems to take part in the modulation of nociception not only in the brain, as suggested earlier, but also at the spinal/peripheral level.
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