Fitting Sylvia, Stevens David L, Khan Fayez A, Scoggins Krista L, Enga Rachel M, Beardsley Patrick M, Knapp Pamela E, Dewey William L, Hauser Kurt F
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology (S.F., D.L.S., F.A.K., K.L.S., R.M.E., P.M.B., P.E.K., W.L.D., K.F.H.), Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology (P.E.K., K.F.H.), Medical College of Virginia Campus, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology (S.F., D.L.S., F.A.K., K.L.S., R.M.E., P.M.B., P.E.K., W.L.D., K.F.H.), Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology (P.E.K., K.F.H.), Medical College of Virginia Campus, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2016 Jan;356(1):96-105. doi: 10.1124/jpet.115.226407. Epub 2015 Nov 5.
Despite considerable evidence that chronic opiate use selectively affects the pathophysiologic consequences of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection in the nervous system, few studies have examined whether neuro-acquired immune deficiency syndrome (neuroAIDS) might intrinsically alter the pharmacologic responses to chronic opiate exposure. This is an important matter because HIV-1 and opiate abuse are interrelated epidemics, and HIV-1 patients are often prescribed opiates as a treatment of HIV-1-related neuropathic pain. Tolerance and physical dependence are inevitable consequences of frequent and repeated administration of morphine. In the present study, mice expressing HIV-1 Tat in a doxycycline (DOX)-inducible manner [Tat(+)], their Tat(-) controls, and control C57BL/6 mice were chronically exposed to placebo or 75-mg morphine pellets to explore the effects of Tat induction on morphine tolerance and dependence. Antinociceptive tolerance and locomotor activity tolerance were assessed using tail-flick and locomotor activity assays, respectively, and physical dependence was measured with the platform-jumping assay and recording of other withdrawal signs. We found that Tat(+) mice treated with DOX [Tat(+)/DOX] developed an increased tolerance in the tail-flick assay compared with control Tat(-)/DOX and/or C57/DOX mice. Equivalent tolerance was developed in all mice when assessed by locomotor activity. Further, Tat(+)/DOX mice expressed reduced levels of physical dependence to chronic morphine exposure after a 1-mg/kg naloxone challenge compared with control Tat(-)/DOX and/or C57/DOX mice. Assuming the results seen in Tat transgenic mice can be generalized to neuroAIDS, our findings suggest that HIV-1-infected individuals may display heightened analgesic tolerance to similar doses of opiates compared with uninfected individuals and show fewer symptoms of physical dependence.
尽管有大量证据表明长期使用阿片类药物会选择性地影响1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)感染在神经系统中的病理生理后果,但很少有研究探讨神经获得性免疫缺陷综合征(神经艾滋病)是否会内在地改变对长期阿片类药物暴露的药理反应。这是一个重要问题,因为HIV-1和阿片类药物滥用是相互关联的流行病,而且HIV-1患者经常被开阿片类药物来治疗与HIV-1相关的神经性疼痛。耐受性和身体依赖性是频繁和重复给予吗啡不可避免的后果。在本研究中,以强力霉素(DOX)诱导方式表达HIV-1 Tat的小鼠[Tat(+)]、其Tat(-)对照小鼠以及对照C57BL/6小鼠长期暴露于安慰剂或75毫克吗啡丸剂,以探讨Tat诱导对吗啡耐受性和依赖性的影响。分别使用甩尾试验和运动活动试验评估抗伤害感受耐受性和运动活动耐受性,并通过平台跳跃试验和记录其他戒断症状来测量身体依赖性。我们发现,与对照Tat(-)/DOX和/或C57/DOX小鼠相比,用DOX处理的Tat(+)小鼠[Tat(+)/DOX]在甩尾试验中产生了更高的耐受性。通过运动活动评估时,所有小鼠都产生了同等的耐受性。此外,与对照Tat(-)/DOX和/或C57/DOX小鼠相比,Tat(+)/DOX小鼠在1毫克/千克纳洛酮激发后对慢性吗啡暴露的身体依赖性水平降低。假设在Tat转基因小鼠中看到的结果可以推广到神经艾滋病,我们的研究结果表明,与未感染个体相比,感染HIV-1的个体可能对相似剂量的阿片类药物表现出更高的镇痛耐受性,并且身体依赖性症状更少。