Chronic opioid agonist treatment produces tolerance and in some cases opioid receptor internalization and down-regulation. Both morphine and etorphine induce tolerance; however, only etorphine produces mu-opioid receptor (muOR) down-regulation. In vitro studies implicate dynamin-2 (DYN-2) and G-protein receptor kinase-2 (GRK-2) in these processes. Therefore, we examined etorphine and morphine effects on regulation of GRK-2 and DYN-2 in mouse spinal cord. Mice were treated for 7 days with etorphine (200 microg/kg/day infusion) or morphine (40 mg/kg/day infusion + one 25-mg implant pellet). Controls were implanted with a placebo pellet. On the 7th day after implantation mice were tested for i.t. [D-Ala(2),N-Me-Phe(4),Gly(5)-ol]-enkephalin (DAMGO) analgesia. In other mice, spinal cord was removed for [(3)H]DAMGO binding studies or GRK-2 and DYN-2 protein and mRNA abundance were determined. Both etorphine and morphine produced significant tolerance (ED(50) shift = 7.6- and 7.3-fold for morphine and etorphine, respectively). Etorphine decreased spinal muOR density by approximately 30%, whereas morphine did not change muOR density. Etorphine increased ( approximately 70%) DYN-2 protein abundance and decreased its mRNA (31%), whereas it had no effect on GRK-2 protein and mRNA abundance. Morphine had no effect on either DYN-2 or GRK-2 protein or mRNA abundance. These data raise the possibility that unequal receptor regulation by etorphine and morphine might be due to differential regulation of trafficking proteins. Overall, receptor down-regulation associated with chronic etorphine treatment may accelerate dynamin-related activity. Finally, the decrease in DYN-2 mRNA may be related to stabilization of DYN-2 protein abundance, which might inhibit transcription.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/mol.62.6.1464 | DOI Listing |
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