Singh S, Singh P P
Department of Biotechnology, National Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research, Nagar, India.
Life Sci. 2000;67(9):1035-45. doi: 10.1016/s0024-3205(00)00701-3.
Morphine abuse is known to cause immunosuppression and enhanced host susceptibility to malaria. We studied the effect of morphine on the Plasmodium berghei total-parasite-antigens soluble in culture medium (P.b.SA)-induced production of colony-stimulating factors (CSFs) by mouse peritoneal macrophages, in vitro. Morphine exerted a concentration-dependent biphasic modulatory effect; at 1 x 10(-4)-1 x 10 x 10(-6) M it slightly inhibited, whereas at 1 X 10(-8)-1 x 10(-10) M it augmented the production of CSFs. However, at 1 x 10(-12) M concentration the augmenting effect of morphine was significantly (p<0.05) diminished. Selective agonists of delta- (DPDPE) and mu- (DAGO) opioid receptors also respectively, inhibited and augmented the production of CSFs. The CSFs appear to be synthesized de novo as cycloheximide (50.0 microg/ml) completely inhibited their production. Naloxone ( 1 x 10(-5) M) lacked any effect on the inhibitory effect of morphine; however, at 1 x 10(-3) M it exerted partial blocking effect. Conversely, at 1 x 10(-5) M naloxone significantly (p<0.05) blocked the augmenting effect of morphine. These results suggest that morphine via opioid receptors, in a concentration-dependent biphasic manner, modulated the P.b.SA-induced de novo production of CSFs by macrophages, in vitro.