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Publication : Basal signaling activity of mu opioid receptor in mouse brain: role in narcotic dependence.

First Author  Wang D Year  2004
Journal  J Pharmacol Exp Ther Volume  308
Issue  2 Pages  512-20
PubMed ID  14600246 Mgi Jnum  J:95985
Mgi Id  MGI:3528524 Doi  10.1124/jpet.103.054049
Citation  Wang D, et al. (2004) Basal signaling activity of mu opioid receptor in mouse brain: role in narcotic dependence. J Pharmacol Exp Ther 308(2):512-20
abstractText  Narcotic analgesics cause addiction by poorly understood mechanisms, involving mu opoid receptor (MOR). Previous cell culture studies have demonstrated significant basal, spontaneous MOR signaling activity, but its relevance to narcotic addiction remained unclear. In this study, we tested basal MOR-signaling activity in brain tissue from untreated and morphine-pretreated mice, in comparison to antagonist-induced withdrawal in morphine-dependent mice. Using guanosine 5'-O-(3-[(35)S]thio)triphosphate ([(35)S]GTP gamma S) binding and adenylyl cyclase activity assay in brain homogenates, we demonstrated that morphine pretreatment of mice enhanced basal MOR signaling in mouse brain homogenates and, moreover, caused persistent changes in the effects of naloxone and naltrexone, antagonists that elicit severe withdrawal in dependent subjects. Naloxone and naltrexone suppressed basal [(35)S]GTP gamma S binding (acting as 'inverse agonists') only after morphine pretreatment, but not in drug-naive animals. Moreover, naloxone and naltrexone stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity in striatum homogenates only after morphine pretreatment, by reversing the inhibitory effects of basal MOR activity. After cessation of morphine treatment, the time course of inverse naloxone effects on basal MOR signaling was similar to the time course of naltrexone-stimulated narcotic withdrawal over several days. The neutral antagonist 6 beta-naltrexol blocked MOR activation without affecting basal signaling (G protein coupling and adenylyl cyclase regulation) and also elicited substantially less severe withdrawal. These results demonstrate long-lasting regulation of basal MOR signaling as a potential factor in narcotic dependence.
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