Stevens K E, Leslie F M, Evans C J, Belluzzi J D, Stein L
Department of Pharmacology, University of California, Irvine 92717.
Neuropeptides. 1988 Jul;12(1):21-7. doi: 10.1016/s0143-4179(98)90005-1.
BAM-18, a proenkephalin A-derived opioid peptide, is widely distributed throughout rat CNS and displays high affinity for both mu and kappa opioid receptors. In the present study, BAM-18 was tested in two analgesia paradigms, tail-flick and hot-plate. Injections were centrally administered through a chronically implanted unilateral cannula in the lateral ventricle. In the tail-flick, low doses of BAM-18 (5 micrograms) produced a hyperalgesia while high doses of BAM-18 (50 micrograms) produced an analgesic response. Naloxone (10 mg/kg, s.c.) reversed the BAM-18-induced analgesia and unmasked a persistent hyperalgesia. Morphine-induced (1 microgram) analgesia was completely reversed by 5 micrograms BAM-18. In the hot-plate test, high doses of BAM-18 produced analgesia, with no hyperalgesia observed at any dose. Naloxone reversed the BAM-18-induced analgesia. The locomotor effects of BAM-18 did not differ from those of morphine except in effective dose (50 micrograms vs. 5 micrograms, respectively). Opioid and non-opioid effects of BAM-18 are discussed and compared with other endogenous peptides.