Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7281353 | Brain, Behavior, and Immunity | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Increasing evidence demonstrates induction of proinflammatory Toll-like receptor (TLR) 2 and TLR4 signaling by morphine and, TLR4 signaling by alcohol; thus indicating a common site of drug action and a potential novel innate immune-dependent hypothesis for opioid and alcohol drug interactions. Hence, the current study aimed to assess the role of TLR2, TLR4, MyD88 (as a critical TLR-signaling participant), NF-κB, Interleukin-1β (IL-1β; as a downstream proinflammatory effector molecule) and the μ opioid receptor (MOR; as a classical site for morphine action) in acute alcohol-induced sedation (4.5 g/kg) and alcohol (2.5 g/kg) interaction with morphine (5 mg/kg) by assessing the loss of righting reflex (LORR) as a measure of sedation. Wild-type male Balb/c mice and matched genetically-deficient TLR2, TLR4, and MyD88 strains were utilized, together with pharmacological manipulation of MOR, NF-κB, TLR4 and Interleukin-1β. Alcohol induced significant LORR in wild-type mice; this was halved by MyD88 and TLR4 deficiency, and surprisingly nearly completely eliminated by TLR2 deficiency. In contrast, the interaction between morphine and alcohol was found to be MOR-, NF-κB-, TLR2- and MyD88-dependent, but did not involve TLR4 or Interleukin-1β. Morphine-alcohol interactions caused acute elevations in microglial cell counts and NF-κB-p65 positive cells in the motor cortex in concordance with wild-type and TLR2 deficient mouse behavioral data, implicating neuroimmunopharmacological signaling as a pivotal mechanism in this clinically problematic drug-drug interaction.
Keywords
NF-κBMORMYD88LORRIL-1RATLRNMDAN-methyl-d-aspartateμ Opioid receptorinterleukin-1 receptor antagonistLoss of righting reflexgamma-aminobutyric acidDrug interactionsToll-like receptorCNSCytokinescentral nervous systemmyeloid differentiation factor 88nuclear factor-κBToll like receptorsdrug overdoseNaloxonemyeloid differentiation primary response gene 88GABA
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Authors
Frances Corrigan, Yue Wu, Jonathan Tuke, Janet K. Coller, Kenner C. Rice, Kerrilyn R. Diener, John D. Hayball, Linda R. Watkins, Andrew A. Somogyi, Mark R. Hutchinson,