AI Article Synopsis

  • Painful diabetic neuropathy is difficult to manage with traditional painkillers, often requiring high opioid doses that can harm the patient's well-being.
  • The study found that in diabetic rats, μ-opioid receptors (MORs) were misdirected to lysosomes instead of remaining on the cell membrane, leading to reduced pain relief from opioids.
  • By blocking the movement of MORs to lysosomes or promoting their return to the cell surface, researchers increased the effectiveness of opioids in alleviating pain, highlighting different mechanisms of opioid responsiveness depending on the type of pain.

Article Abstract

Painful diabetic neuropathy is poorly controlled by analgesics and requires high doses of opioids, triggering side effects and reducing patient quality of life. This study investigated whether enhanced Rab7-mediated lysosomal targeting of peripheral sensory neuron μ-opioid receptors (MORs) is responsible for diminished opioid responsiveness in rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes. In diabetic animals, significantly impaired peripheral opioid analgesia was associated with a loss in sensory neuron MOR and a reduction in functional MOR G-protein-coupling. In control animals, MORs were retained mainly on the neuronal cell membrane. In contrast, in diabetic rats, they were colocalized with upregulated Rab7 in LampI-positive perinuclear lysosome compartments. Silencing endogenous Rab7 with intrathecal Rab7-siRNA or, indirectly, by reversing nerve growth factor deprivation in peripheral sensory neurons not only prevented MOR targeting to lysosomes, restoring their plasma membrane density, but also rescued opioid responsiveness toward better pain relief. These findings elucidate in vivo the mechanisms by which enhanced Rab7 lysosomal targeting of MORs leads to a loss in opioid antinociception in diabetic neuropathic pain. This is in contrast to peripheral sensory neuron MOR upregulation and antinociception in inflammatory pain, and provides intriguing evidence that regulation of opioid responsiveness varies as a function of pain pathogenesis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3609597PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db12-0590DOI Listing

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