IGBMC Institut de Génétique et de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire, Translational Medicine and Neurogenetic Programme, UdS Université de Strasbourg, INSERM U964, CNRS UMR7104, Illkirch, France.
PLoS One. 2013 Sep 12;8(9):e74706. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074706. eCollection 2013.
Opiates are powerful drugs to treat severe pain, and act via mu opioid receptors distributed throughout the nervous system. Their clinical use is hampered by centrally-mediated adverse effects, including nausea or respiratory depression. Here we used a genetic approach to investigate the potential of peripheral mu opioid receptors as targets for pain treatment. We generated conditional knockout (cKO) mice in which mu opioid receptors are deleted specifically in primary afferent Nav1.8-positive neurons. Mutant animals were compared to controls for acute nociception, inflammatory pain, opiate-induced analgesia and constipation. There was a 76% decrease of mu receptor-positive neurons and a 60% reduction of mu-receptor mRNA in dorsal root ganglia of cKO mice. Mutant mice showed normal responses to heat, mechanical, visceral and chemical stimuli, as well as unchanged morphine antinociception and tolerance to antinociception in models of acute pain. Inflammatory pain developed similarly in cKO and controls mice after Complete Freund's Adjuvant. In the inflammation model, however, opiate-induced (morphine, fentanyl and loperamide) analgesia was reduced in mutant mice as compared to controls, and abolished at low doses. Morphine-induced constipation remained intact in cKO mice. We therefore genetically demonstrate for the first time that mu opioid receptors partly mediate opiate analgesia at the level of Nav1.8-positive sensory neurons. In our study, this mechanism operates under conditions of inflammatory pain, but not nociception. Previous pharmacology suggests that peripheral opiates may be clinically useful, and our data further demonstrate that Nav1.8 neuron-associated mu opioid receptors are feasible targets to alleviate some forms of persistent pain.
阿片类药物是治疗严重疼痛的强效药物,通过分布在神经系统中的μ阿片受体发挥作用。其临床应用受到中枢介导的不良反应的阻碍,包括恶心或呼吸抑制。在这里,我们使用遗传方法研究了外周μ阿片受体作为治疗疼痛靶点的潜力。我们生成了条件性敲除 (cKO) 小鼠,其中 μ 阿片受体特异性缺失于初级传入 Nav1.8 阳性神经元中。将突变动物与对照动物进行比较,以评估急性痛觉过敏、炎症性疼痛、阿片类药物诱导的镇痛和便秘。cKO 小鼠的背根神经节中 μ 受体阳性神经元减少了 76%,μ 受体 mRNA 减少了 60%。突变小鼠对热、机械、内脏和化学刺激的反应正常,吗啡的镇痛作用和急性疼痛模型中对镇痛作用的耐受性也没有改变。在完全弗氏佐剂后,cKO 和对照小鼠的炎症性疼痛均相似发展。然而,在炎症模型中,与对照小鼠相比,突变小鼠的阿片类药物诱导的(吗啡、芬太尼和洛哌丁胺)镇痛作用降低,并在低剂量时消失。吗啡诱导的便秘在 cKO 小鼠中保持完整。因此,我们首次从遗传学上证明,μ 阿片受体部分在 Nav1.8 阳性感觉神经元水平上介导阿片类药物的镇痛作用。在我们的研究中,这种机制在炎症性疼痛的情况下起作用,但在疼痛感受中不起作用。先前的药理学表明,外周阿片类药物可能具有临床应用价值,我们的数据进一步表明,Nav1.8 神经元相关的 μ 阿片受体是缓解某些形式持续性疼痛的可行靶点。