Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8533473 | Journal of Pharmacological Sciences | 2017 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
We investigated the mechanisms underlying the suppression of the rewarding effects of opioids using the femur bone cancer (FBC) mouse model. The rewarding and antinociceptive effects of subcutaneously administered morphine and oxycodone in the FBC model mice were assessed using the conditioned place preference test and the von-Frey test. In FBC mice, antinociceptive doses of morphine (30Â mg/kg) and oxycodone (5Â mg/kg) did not produce the rewarding effects but excessive doses of morphine (300Â mg/kg) and oxycodone (100Â mg/kg) did. Western blot analyses revealed a transient and significant increase in phosphorylated-extracellular regulated kinase (p-ERK) levels in ventral tegmental area (VTA) 5Â min after the administration of morphine in sham-group. Interestingly, in FBC group, a regular dose of morphine did not increase p-ERK levels but a high dose of morphine caused an increase in p-ERK level 5Â min after administration. The rewarding effects of a regular dose of and a high dose of morphine in the sham-operation and FBC model, respectively, were significantly inhibited by the MEK inhibitor. The suppression of p-ERK might result in resistance to these rewarding effects under the conditions of bone cancer.
Keywords
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Authors
Atsushi Nakamura, Hiroko Ono, Azusa Ando, Mikie Hinata, Kazuki Niidome, Shigeki Omachi, Gaku Sakaguchi, Shunji Shinohara,