Opioid agonists differentially regulate mu-opioid receptors and trafficking proteins in vivo.

Mol Pharmacol

Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy and Allied Health Professions, St. John's University, Queens, New York 11439, USA.

Published: December 2002

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic treatment with opioids like etorphine and morphine leads to tolerance and different effects on mu-opioid receptor regulation, with etorphine causing receptor down-regulation and morphine not affecting receptor density.
  • The study found that etorphine significantly increases the abundance of dynamin-2 protein while decreasing its mRNA, suggesting a unique mechanism that may involve differential regulation compared to morphine, which had no significant effects on these proteins.
  • These findings hint at the possibility that the different regulatory pathways activated by etorphine versus morphine could affect how opioid treatment outcomes vary, potentially influencing pain management strategies.

Article Abstract

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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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/mol.62.6.1464DOI Listing

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