Thomas J M, Hoffman B B
Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California.
J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 1993 Jan;264(1):368-74.
Buprenorphine is an opiate drug with a mixed agonist-antagonist profile and has therapeutic efficacy in attenuating drug craving and addiction. Because the adenylyl cyclase system has been implicated in the biochemical basis of opiate withdrawal phenomena, we have compared the acute and chronic effects of buprenorphine with the full opiate agonist etorphine on cyclic AMP (cAMP) synthesis in the human neuroblastoma cell SK-N-SH. Both drugs acutely inhibited prostaglandin (PG)E1-stimulated cAMP accumulation; the inhibition caused by either drug was prevented by pretreatment with the opiate antagonist naltrexone or with pertussis toxin. Chronic treatment of the cells with etorphine induced an increase in PGE1-stimulated cAMP synthesis which was observed after withdrawal of the inhibitory drug. Chronic treatment with buprenorphine appeared to have the opposite effect, resulting in an attenuated PGE1 stimulation; additionally, buprenorphine prevented the etorphine-induced enhancement in cAMP synthesis, whether administered before or after prolonged incubation of the cells with etorphine. The attenuating effect of buprenorphine occurred within 5 min and was prevented by a prior application of naltrexone, but could not be reversed by a subsequent treatment with antagonist. These findings suggest that buprenorphine was binding (pseudo)irreversibly to the opiate receptor, resulting in a persistent inhibition of cAMP synthesis which masks the etorphine-induced enhancement of adenylyl cyclase activity. This hypothesis was confirmed by experiments demonstrating that treatment of the cells with buprenorphine significantly reduced available opiate receptor binding sites despite extensive washing of the cells to remove unbound buprenorphine. These pharmacodynamic actions of buprenorphine may be relevant to its therapeutic efficacy in treating drug abuse and addiction.
丁丙诺啡是一种具有混合激动-拮抗作用的阿片类药物,在减轻药物渴望和成瘾方面具有治疗效果。由于腺苷酸环化酶系统与阿片类戒断现象的生化基础有关,我们比较了丁丙诺啡与完全阿片激动剂埃托啡对人神经母细胞瘤细胞SK-N-SH中环磷酸腺苷(cAMP)合成的急性和慢性影响。两种药物均能急性抑制前列腺素(PG)E1刺激的cAMP积累;阿片拮抗剂纳曲酮或百日咳毒素预处理可阻止这两种药物引起的抑制作用。用埃托啡对细胞进行慢性处理后,在撤除抑制性药物后观察到PGE1刺激的cAMP合成增加。用丁丙诺啡进行慢性处理似乎产生相反的效果,导致PGE1刺激减弱;此外,无论在细胞与埃托啡长时间孵育之前还是之后给予丁丙诺啡,它都能阻止埃托啡诱导的cAMP合成增强。丁丙诺啡的减弱作用在5分钟内出现,可被预先应用纳曲酮阻止,但不能被随后的拮抗剂处理逆转。这些发现表明,丁丙诺啡与阿片受体(假)不可逆结合,导致cAMP合成持续受到抑制,从而掩盖了埃托啡诱导的腺苷酸环化酶活性增强。实验证实了这一假设,即尽管对细胞进行了广泛冲洗以去除未结合的丁丙诺啡,但用丁丙诺啡处理细胞仍显著减少了可用的阿片受体结合位点。丁丙诺啡的这些药效学作用可能与其治疗药物滥用和成瘾的疗效有关。