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1.
Front Behav Neurosci ; 16: 910056, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35990727

RESUMEN

When a maternal rat nurtures her pups, she relies on adequate resources to provide optimal care for her offspring. Accordingly, limited environmental resources may result in atypical maternal care, disrupting various developmental outcomes. In the current study, maternal Long-Evans rats were randomly assigned to either a standard resource (SR) group, provided with four cups of bedding and two paper towels for nesting material or a limited resource (LR) group, provided with a quarter of the bedding and nesting material provided for the SR group. Offspring were monitored at various developmental phases throughout the study. After weaning, pups were housed in same-sex dyads in environments with SRs for continued observations. Subsequent behavioral tests revealed a sex × resource interaction in play behavior on PND 28; specifically, LR reduced play attacks in males while LR increased play attacks in females. A sex × resource interaction was also observed in anxiety-related responses in the open field task with an increase in thigmotaxis in LR females and, in the social interaction task, females exhibited more external rears oriented away from the social target. Focusing on morphological variables, tail length measurements of LR males and females were shorter on PND 9, 16, and 21; however, differences in tail length were no longer present at PND 35. Following the behavioral assessments, animals were perfused at 56 days of age and subsequent immunohistochemical assays indicated increased glucocorticoid receptors in the lateral habenula of LR offspring and higher c-Fos immunoreactivity in the basolateral amygdala of SR offspring. Further, when tail vertebrae and tail tendons were assessed via micro-CT and hydroxyproline assays, results indicated increased trabecular separation, decreased bone volume fraction, and decreased connectivity density in bones, along with reduced collagen concentration in tendons in the LR animals. In sum, although the restricted resources only persisted for a brief duration, the effects appear to be far-reaching and pervasive in this early life stress animal model.

2.
Adv Exp Med Biol ; 1370: 461-479, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35882819

RESUMEN

Lead (Pb2+) is a developmental neurotoxicant that causes alterations in the brain's excitation-to-inhibition (E/I) balance by disrupting the development of the GABAergic systems. These GABAergic disruptions have persistent neurobiological and neurobehavioral structure-function relationships that can be examined using animal models of Pb2+ exposure. Further, taurine, a GABA-AR agonist, has been shown to offer neuroprotection against neurodevelopmental Pb2+ exposure and senescence. The present study evaluated the effects of Pb2+ exposure (i.e., at 150 ppm and 1,000 ppm doses) on Long Evans hooded rats during the perinatal period of development on locomotor activity in the open field (OF) and anxiety-like behaviors in the elevated plus maze (EPM). This was followed by an examination of brain mass using an encephalization quotient (EQ) and isotropic fractionation (ITF) of total cells and the number of neurons and non-neuronal cells in the prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, and diencephalon. The results suggest that neurodevelopmental Pb2+ exposure caused persistent anxiety-like behaviors in both the OF and EPM with associated changes in EQ, but not ITF-determined cell density. Further, taurine treatment was observed to compensate for Pb2+ exposure in the behavioral assessments although precise neurobiological mechanisms remain unknown. Thus, more work is required to evaluate the role of taurine and other anxiolytic compounds in the alleviation of neurotoxicant-induced neurobehavioral syndromes and their associated neurobiological correlates.


Asunto(s)
Ansiolíticos , Taurina , Animales , Ansiolíticos/farmacología , Ansiedad/inducido químicamente , Ansiedad/tratamiento farmacológico , Femenino , Hipocampo , Plomo/toxicidad , Embarazo , Ratas , Ratas Long-Evans , Taurina/farmacología
3.
Physiology (Bethesda) ; 36(5): 315-323, 2021 09 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34431418

RESUMEN

Bidirectional interactions of the gut epithelium with commensal bacteria are critical for maintaining homeostasis within the gut. Chronic opioid exposure perturbs gut homeostasis through a multitude of neuro-immune-epithelial mechanisms, resulting in the development of analgesic tolerance, a major underpinning of the current opioid crisis. Differences in molecular mechanisms of opioid tolerance between the enteric and central pain pathways pose a significant challenge for managing chronic pain without untoward gastrointestinal effects.


Asunto(s)
Microbioma Gastrointestinal , Epidemia de Opioides , Analgésicos Opioides/efectos adversos , Tolerancia a Medicamentos , Humanos , Mucosa Intestinal
4.
Eur J Pharmacol ; 899: 174007, 2021 May 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33705801

RESUMEN

G-protein-biased agonists with reduced ß-arrestin-2 activation are being investigated as safer alternatives to clinically-used opioids. ß-arrestin-2 has been implicated in the mechanism of opioid-induced antinociceptive tolerance. Opioid-induced analgesic tolerance is classically considered as centrally-mediated, but recent reports implicate nociceptive dorsal root ganglia neurons as critical mediators in this process. Here, we investigated the role of ß-arrestin-2 in the mechanism of opioid tolerance in dorsal root ganglia nociceptive neurons using ß-arrestin-2 knockout mice and the G-protein-biased µ-opioid receptor agonist, TRV130. Whole-cell current-clamp electrophysiology experiments revealed that 15-18-h overnight exposure to 10 µM morphine in vitro induced acute tolerance in ß-arrestin-2 wild-type but not knockout neurons. Furthermore, in wild-type neurons circumventing ß-arrestin-2 activation by overnight treatment with 200 nM TRV130 attenuated tolerance. Similarly, acute morphine tolerance in vivo in ß-arrestin-2 knockout mice was prevented in the warm-water tail-withdrawal assay. Treatment with 30 mg/kg TRV130 s.c. also inhibited acute antinociceptive tolerance in vivo in wild-type mice. Alternately, in ß-arrestin-2 knockout neurons tolerance induced by 7-day in vivo exposure to 50 mg morphine pellet was conserved. Likewise, ß-arrestin-2 deletion did not mitigate in vivo antinociceptive tolerance induced by 7-day exposure to 25 mg or 50 mg morphine pellet in both female or male mice, respectively. Consequently, these results indicated that ß-arrestin-2 mediates acute but not chronic opioid tolerance in dorsal root ganglia neurons and to antinociception in vivo. This suggests that opioid-induced antinociceptive tolerance may develop even in the absence of ß-arrestin-2 activation, and thus significantly affect the clinical utility of biased agonists.


Asunto(s)
Analgésicos Opioides/farmacología , Tolerancia a Medicamentos , Ganglios Espinales/efectos de los fármacos , Morfina/farmacología , Neuronas/efectos de los fármacos , Dolor Nociceptivo/prevención & control , Receptores Opioides mu/agonistas , Compuestos de Espiro/farmacología , Tiofenos/farmacología , Arrestina beta 2/metabolismo , Animales , Conducta Animal/efectos de los fármacos , Células Cultivadas , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Femenino , Ganglios Espinales/metabolismo , Ganglios Espinales/fisiopatología , Masculino , Ratones Noqueados , Neuronas/metabolismo , Dolor Nociceptivo/genética , Dolor Nociceptivo/metabolismo , Dolor Nociceptivo/fisiopatología , Umbral del Dolor/efectos de los fármacos , Receptores Opioides mu/metabolismo , Factores de Tiempo , Arrestina beta 2/deficiencia , Arrestina beta 2/genética
5.
Front Pain Res (Lausanne) ; 2: 738499, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35295474

RESUMEN

Opioids and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are excellent analgesics, but recent clinical evidence suggests that these drugs might worsen disease severity in Crohn's disease patients, limiting their clinical utility for treating Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). One indicator of change in well-being from conditions such as IBD is behavioral depression and disruption to activities of daily living. Preclinical measures of behavioral depression can provide an indicator of changes in quality of life and subsequent modification by candidate analgesics. In mice, nesting is an adaptive unconditioned behavior that is susceptible to disruption by noxious stimuli, and some types of pain related nesting depression are responsive to opioid and NSAID analgesics. Here we show that a 2, 4, 6-trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS) model of experimental colitis depresses nesting behavior in mice, and we evaluated effects of morphine, an opioid, and ketoprofen, a NSAID, on TNBS-induced nesting depression. In Swiss Webster mice, TNBS significantly reduced nesting that peaked on Day 3 and recovered in a time-dependent manner with complete recovery by Day 7. In the absence of colonic inflammation, daily treatment with morphine (1-10 mg/kg) did not decrease nesting except at 10mg/kg/day. However, in TNBS-treated mice 3.2 mg/kg/day morphine significantly exacerbated TNBS-induced nesting depression and delayed recovery. While 3.2 mg/kg/day morphine alone did not alter locomotor activity and TNBS-induced depression of locomotion recovered, the combination of TNBS and 3.2 mg/kg/day morphine significantly attenuated locomotion and prevented recovery. Daily treatment with 3.2 or 10 mg/kg ketoprofen in TNBS-treated mice did not prevent depression of nesting. These data suggest that opioid analgesics but not NSAIDS worsen colonic inflammation-induced behavioral depression. Furthermore, these findings highlight the importance of evaluating analgesic effects in models of colonic inflammation induced depression of behavior.

6.
Mol Pharmacol ; 93(5): 417-426, 2018 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29467238

RESUMEN

Oxycodone is a semisynthetic opioid compound that is widely prescribed, used, and abused today, and has a well-established role in shaping the current opioid epidemic. Previously, we have shown that tolerance develops to the antinociceptive and respiratory depressive effects of oxycodone in mice, and that a moderate dose of acute ethanol or a protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor reversed that tolerance. To investigate further if tolerance was occurring through neuronal mechanisms, our aims for this study were to assess the effects of acute and prolonged oxycodone in isolated dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons and to determine if this tolerance was reversed by either ethanol or a PKC inhibitor. We found that an acute exposure to 3 µM oxycodone reduced neuronal excitability, as measured by increased threshold potentials and reduced action potential amplitude, without eliciting measurable changes in resting membrane potential. Exposure to 10 µM oxycodone for 18-24 hours prevented oxycodone's effect on neuronal excitability, indicative of tolerance development. The development of opioid tolerance was mitigated in DRG neurons from ß-arrestin 2 knockout mice. Oxycodone tolerance was reversed in isolated DRG neurons by the acute application of either ethanol (20 mM) or the PKC inhibitor, bisindolylmaleimide XI hydrochloride (Bis XI), when a challenge of 3 µM oxycodone significantly reduced neuronal excitability following prolonged exposure. Through these studies, we concluded that oxycodone acutely reduced neuronal excitability, tolerance developed to this effect, and reversal of that tolerance occurred at the level of a single neuron, suggesting that reversal of oxycodone tolerance by either ethanol or Bis XI involves cellular mechanisms.


Asunto(s)
Tolerancia a Medicamentos , Etanol/farmacología , Ganglios Espinales/efectos de los fármacos , Neuronas/efectos de los fármacos , Oxicodona/farmacología , Potenciales de Acción/efectos de los fármacos , Analgésicos Opioides/efectos adversos , Analgésicos Opioides/farmacología , Animales , Células Cultivadas , Ganglios Espinales/citología , Indoles/farmacología , Masculino , Maleimidas/farmacología , Potenciales de la Membrana/efectos de los fármacos , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Ratones Noqueados , Neuronas/fisiología , Proteína Quinasa C/antagonistas & inhibidores , Inhibidores de Proteínas Quinasas/farmacología , Arrestina beta 2/genética
7.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther ; 362(1): 45-52, 2017 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28442580

RESUMEN

This study compared the development of tolerance to two orally bioavailable prescription opioids, oxycodone and hydrocodone, to that of morphine, and the reversal of this tolerance by ethanol. Oxycodone (s.c.) was significantly more potent in the mouse tail-withdrawal assay than either morphine or hydrocodone. Oxycodone was also significantly more potent in this assay than hydrocodone when administered orally. Tolerance was seen following chronic subcutaneous administration of each of the three drugs and by the chronic administration of oral oxycodone, but not following the chronic oral administration of hydrocodone. Ethanol (1 g/kg i.p.) significantly reversed the tolerance to the subcutaneous administration of each of the three opioids that developed when given 30 minutes prior to challenge doses. It took twice as much ethanol, when given orally, to reverse the tolerance to oxycodone. We investigated whether the observed tolerance to oxycodone and its reversal by ethanol were due to biodispositional changes or reflected a true neuronal tolerance. As expected, a relationship between brain oxycodone concentrations and activity in the tail-immersion test existed following administration of acute oral oxycodone. Following chronic treatment, brain oxycodone concentrations were significantly lower than acute concentrations. Oral ethanol (2 g/kg) reversed the tolerance to chronic oxycodone, but did not alter brain concentrations of either acute or chronic oxycodone. These studies show that there is a metabolic component of tolerance to oxycodone; however, the reversal of that tolerance by ethanol is not due to an alteration of the biodisposition of oxycodone, but rather is neuronal in nature.


Asunto(s)
Analgésicos Opioides/farmacología , Depresores del Sistema Nervioso Central/farmacología , Etanol/farmacología , Hidrocodona/farmacología , Oxicodona/farmacología , Analgésicos Opioides/farmacocinética , Animales , Conducta Animal/efectos de los fármacos , Encéfalo/efectos de los fármacos , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Relación Dosis-Respuesta a Droga , Tolerancia a Medicamentos , Hidrocodona/farmacocinética , Masculino , Ratones , Oxicodona/farmacocinética , Dolor/psicología , Dimensión del Dolor/efectos de los fármacos
8.
Neurochem Res ; 41(1-2): 328-339, 2016 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26718829

RESUMEN

In elucidating the role of pharmacodynamic efficacy at D3 receptors in therapeutic effectiveness of dopamine receptor agonists, the influence of study system must be understood. Here two compounds with D3 over D2 selectivity developed in our earlier work, D-264 and D-301, are compared in dopamine receptor-mediated G-protein activation in striatal regions of wild-type and D2 receptor knockout mice and in CHO cells expressing D2 or D3 receptors. In caudate-putamen of D2 knockout mice, D-301 was ~3-fold more efficacious than D-264 in activating G-proteins as assessed by [(35)S]GTPγS binding; in nucleus accumbens, D-301 stimulated G-protein activation whereas D-264 did not. In contrast, the two ligands exerted similar efficacy in both regions of wild-type mice, suggesting both ligands activate D2 receptors with similar efficacy. In D2 and D3 receptor-expressing CHO cells, D-264 and D-301 appeared to act in the [(35)S]GTPγS assay as full agonists because they produced maximal stimulation equal to dopamine. Competition for [(3)H]spiperone binding was then performed to determine Ki/EC50 ratios as an index of receptor reserve for each ligand. Action of D-301, but not D-264, showed receptor reserve in D3 but not in D2 receptor-expressing cells, whereas dopamine showed receptor reserve in both cell lines. Gαo1 is highly expressed in brain and is important in D2-like receptor-G protein coupling. Transfection of Gαo1 in D3- but not D2-expressing CHO cells led to receptor reserve for D-264 without altering receptor expression levels. D-301 and dopamine exhibited receptor reserve in D3-expressing cells both with and without transfection of Gαo1. Altogether, these results indicate that D-301 has greater intrinsic efficacy to activate D3 receptors than D-264, whereas the two compounds act on D2 receptors with similar intrinsic efficacy. These findings also suggest caution in interpreting Emax values from functional assays in receptor-transfected cell models without accounting for receptor reserve.


Asunto(s)
Piperazinas/farmacología , Receptores de Dopamina D2/efectos de los fármacos , Receptores de Dopamina D3/efectos de los fármacos , Tiazoles/farmacología , Animales , Ratones , Ratones Noqueados , Piperazinas/química , Receptores de Dopamina D2/genética , Tiazoles/química
9.
Medchemcomm ; 4(5): 847-851, 2013 May 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23682308

RESUMEN

Opioid substitution and antiretroviral therapies have steadily increased the life spans of AIDS patients with opioid addiction, while the adverse drug-drug interactions and persistence of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders still require new strategies to target opioid abuse and HIV-1 comorbidities. A bivalent ligand 1 with a 21-atom spacer was thus synthesized and explicitly characterized as a novel pharmacological probe to study the underlying mechanism of opioid-enhanced NeuroAIDS. The steric hindrance generated from the spacer affected the binding affinity and Ca2+ flux inhibition function activity of bivalent ligand 1 at the chemokine receptor CCR5 more profoundly than it did at the mu opioid receptor (MOR). However, the CCR5 radioligand binding affinity and the Ca2+ flux inhibition function of the ligand seemed not necessarily to correlate with its antiviral activity given that it was at least two times more potent than maraviroc alone in reducing Tat expression upon HIV-1 infection in human astrocytes. Furthermore, the ligand was also about two times more potent than the simple mixture of maraviroc and naltrexone in the same viral entry inhibition assay. Therefore bivalent ligand 1 seemed to function more effectively by targeting specifically the putative MOR-CCR5 heterodimer in the viral invasion process. The results reported here suggest that a properly designed bivalent ligand may serve as a useful chemical probe to study the potential MOR-CCR5 interaction during the progression of NeuroAIDS.

10.
Org Biomol Chem ; 10(13): 2633-46, 2012 Apr 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22354464

RESUMEN

The bivalent ligand approach has been utilized not only to study the underlying mechanism of G protein-coupled receptors dimerization and/or oligomerization, but also to enhance ligand affinity and/or selectivity for potential treatment of a variety of diseases by targeting this process. Substance abuse and addiction have made both the prevention and the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection more difficult to tackle. Morphine, a mu opioid receptor (MOR) agonist, can accelerate HIV infection through up-regulating the expression of the chemokine receptor CCR5, a well-known co-receptor for HIV invasion to the host cells and this has been extensively studied. Meanwhile, two research groups have described the putative MOR-CCR5 heterodimers in their independent studies. The purpose of this paper is to report the design and synthesis of a bivalent ligand to explore the biological and pharmacological process of the putative MOR-CCR5 dimerization phenomenon. The developed bivalent ligand thus contains two distinct pharmacophores linked through a spacer; ideally one of which will interact with the MOR and the other with the CCR5. Naltrexone and Maraviroc were selected as the pharmacophores to generate such a bivalent probe. The overall reaction route to prepare this bivalent ligand was convergent and efficient, and involved sixteen steps with moderate to good yields. The preliminary biological characterization showed that the bivalent compound 1 retained the pharmacological characteristics of both pharmacophores towards the MOR and the CCR5 respectively with relatively lower binding affinity, which tentatively validated our original molecular design.


Asunto(s)
Multimerización de Proteína , Receptores CCR5/química , Receptores Opioides mu/química , Animales , Células CHO , Cricetinae , Diseño de Fármacos , Ligandos , Estructura Molecular , Unión Proteica , Receptores CCR5/metabolismo , Receptores Opioides mu/metabolismo
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