Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9921507 | European Journal of Pharmacology | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
The potent opioid [Dmt1]endomorphin-2 (Dmt-Pro-Phe-Phe-NH2) differentiated between the opioid receptor subtypes responsible for the antinociception elicited by endomorphin-2 in mice. Antinociception, induced by the intracerebroventricular administration of [Dmt1]endomorphin-2 and inhibited by various opioid receptor antagonists [naloxone, naltrindole, β-funaltrexamine, naloxonazine], was determined by the tail-flick (spinal effect) and hot-plate (supraspinal effect) tests. The opioid receptor subtypes involved in [Dmt1]endomorphin-2-induced antinociception differed between these in vivo model paradigms: naloxone (non-specific opioid receptor antagonist) and β-funaltrexamine (irreversible μ1/μ2-opioid receptor antagonist) blocked antinociception in both tests, although stronger inhibition occurred in the hot-plate than the tail-flick test suggesting involvement of other opioid receptors. Consequently, we applied naloxonazine (μ1-opioid receptor antagonist) that significantly blocked the effect in the hot-plate test and naltrindole (δ-opioid receptor antagonist), which was only effective in the tail-flick test. The data indicated that [Dmt1]endomorphin-2-induced spinal antinociception was primarily mediated by both μ2- and δ-opioid receptors, while a supraspinal mechanism involved only μ1/μ2-subtypes.
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Authors
Yunden Jinsmaa, Yoshio Fujita, Kimitaka Shiotani, Anna Miyazaki, Tingyou Li, Yuko Tsuda, Yoshio Okada, Akihiro Ambo, Yusuke Sasaki, Sharon D. Bryant, Lawrence H. Lazarus,