Xu Heng, Wang Xiaoying, Zimmerman Darin, Boja Emily S, Wang Jiabei, Bilsky Edward J, Rothman Richard B
Clinical Psychopharmacology Section, Intramural Research Program, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, Baltimore, MD 21224-2735, USA.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2005 Oct;315(1):248-55. doi: 10.1124/jpet.105.089367. Epub 2005 Jun 29.
A growing body of literature indicates that chronic morphine exposure alters the expression and function of cytoskeletal proteins in addition to the well established interactions between mu opioid receptors and G proteins. In the present study, we hypothesized that chronic morphine alters the expression and functional effects of G alpha12, a G protein that regulates downstream cytoskeletal proteins via its control of RhoA. Our results showed that chronic morphine treatment decreased the expression of G alpha i2 (64%) and G alpha i3 (60%), had no effect of G alpha o, and increased G alpha12 (66%) expression in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells expressing the cloned human mu opioid receptors (hMOR-CHO cells) but not in cells expressing a mutant mu opioid receptor that do not develop morphine tolerance and dependence (T394A-CHO cells). Morphine treatment had no significant effect on PAR-1 thrombin receptor-activated G protein activity, as measured by thrombin-stimulated guanosine 5'-O-(3-[35S]thio)triphosphate binding. Chronic morphine treatment significantly enhanced thrombin-stimulated RhoA activity and thrombin-stimulated expression of alpha-actinin, a cytoskeletal anchoring protein, in hMOR-CHO cells. Proteomic analysis of two-dimensional gel spots prepared from hMOR-CHO cells showed that morphine treatment affected the expression of a number of proteins associated with morphological changes. Up-regulation of G alpha12 and alpha-actinin by chronic morphine was also observed in mouse brain. Viewed collectively, these findings indicate, for the first time, that chronic morphine enhances the G alpha12-associated signaling system, which is involved in regulating cellular morphology and growth, supporting other findings that chronic morphine may alter cellular morphology, in addition to cellular function.
越来越多的文献表明,除了μ阿片受体与G蛋白之间已确立的相互作用外,慢性吗啡暴露还会改变细胞骨架蛋白的表达和功能。在本研究中,我们假设慢性吗啡会改变Gα12的表达和功能效应,Gα12是一种通过控制RhoA来调节下游细胞骨架蛋白的G蛋白。我们的结果表明,慢性吗啡处理使表达克隆人μ阿片受体的中国仓鼠卵巢(CHO)细胞(hMOR-CHO细胞)中Gαi2(64%)和Gαi3(60%)的表达降低,对Gαo无影响,而使Gα12的表达增加(66%),但在表达不会产生吗啡耐受性和依赖性的突变μ阿片受体的细胞(T394A-CHO细胞)中则没有这种现象。通过凝血酶刺激的鸟苷5'-O-(3-[35S]硫代)三磷酸结合测定,吗啡处理对PAR-1凝血酶受体激活的G蛋白活性没有显著影响。慢性吗啡处理显著增强了hMOR-CHO细胞中凝血酶刺激的RhoA活性以及凝血酶刺激的细胞骨架锚定蛋白α-辅肌动蛋白的表达。对从hMOR-CHO细胞制备的二维凝胶斑点进行蛋白质组学分析表明,吗啡处理影响了许多与形态变化相关的蛋白质的表达。在小鼠脑中也观察到慢性吗啡使Gα12和α-辅肌动蛋白上调。综合来看,这些发现首次表明,慢性吗啡增强了与Gα12相关的信号系统,该系统参与调节细胞形态和生长,支持了慢性吗啡除了改变细胞功能外还可能改变细胞形态的其他发现。