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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 2002, 22(15):6747-6755
Sustained Morphine Exposure Induces a Spinal Dynorphin-Dependent
Enhancement of Excitatory Transmitter Release from Primary Afferent
Fibers
Luis R.
Gardell,
Ruizhong
Wang,
Shannon E.
Burgess,
Michael H.
Ossipov,
Todd W.
Vanderah,
T. Philip
Malan Jr,
Josephine
Lai, and
Frank
Porreca
Departments of Pharmacology and Anesthesiology, University of
Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85724
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ABSTRACT |
Paradoxical opioid-induced pain has been demonstrated repeatedly in
humans and animals. The mechanisms of such pain are unknown but may
relate to opioid-induced activation of descending pain facilitatory
systems and enhanced expression and pronociceptive actions of spinal
dynorphin. Here, the possibility that these opioid-induced central
changes might mediate increased excitability to the spinal cord was
tested. Tactile and thermal hypersensitivity was observed at 7, but not
1, days after subcutaneous morphine pellet implantation; placebo
pellets produced no effects. Basal and capsaicin-evoked release of
calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) was measured in minced
spinal tissues taken from naive rats or rats on post-pellet days 1 and
7. The content and evoked release of CGRP were significantly increased
in tissues from morphine-exposed rats at 7, but not 1, days after
implantation. Morphine increased spinal dynorphin content on day 7 in
rats with sham bilateral lesions of the dorsolateral funiculus (DLF)
but not in rats with DLF lesions. Pharmacological application of
dynorphin A(2-13), a non-opioid fragment, to
tissues from naive rats enhanced the evoked release of CGRP. Enhanced
evoked release of CGRP from morphine-pelleted rats was blocked by
dynorphin antiserum or by previous lesions of the DLF. Sustained
morphine induces plasticity in both primary afferents and spinal cord,
including increased CGRP and dynorphin content. Morphine-induced
elevation of spinal dynorphin content depends on descending influences
and enhances stimulated CGRP release. Enhanced transmitter release may
allow increased stimulus-evoked spinal excitation, which is likely to
be critical for opioid-induced paradoxical pain. Such pain may manifest
behaviorally as antinociceptive tolerance.
Key words:
opiate tolerance; opioid paradoxical pain; descending
facilitation; spinal dynorphin; CGRP release; opioid trophic
effects
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INTRODUCTION |
It is well documented that morphine
elicits paradoxical abnormal pain (i.e., hyperalgesia or enhanced
nociception) in both clinical and preclinical settings. Abnormal pain
has been described in patients after spinal morphine administered for
chronic pain (Arner and Meyerson, 1988 ). Such abnormal pain differs in
presentation, location, and quality than the original pain complaint
(Ali, 1986 ; Stillman et al., 1987 ; De Conno et al., 1991 ; Devulder,
1997 ). Preclinical studies have also demonstrated opioid-induced
abnormal pain (Yaksh et al., 1986 ; Yaksh and Harty, 1988 ; Mao et al.,
1994 , 1995c , 1998 ; Larcher et al., 1998 ; Celerier et al., 2000 , 2001 ; Vanderah et al., 2000 , 2001a ,b ). The mechanisms underlying such pain
are unknown. Recent investigations have demonstrated that morphine-evoked abnormal pain may result from neuroplastic changes in
the rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM) (Vanderah et al., 2001b ). The
RVM has been identified as a source of spinopetal inhibitory and
facilitatory modulation of nociceptive inputs (Heinricher et al., 1989 ;
Fields, 1992 ; Morgan et al., 1992 ). Manipulations performed in the RVM
that block its activity are known to block pain in a number of
settings, including inflammation (Mansikka and Pertovaara, 1997 ) and
nerve injury (Kovelowski et al., 2000 ; Burgess et al., 2002 ).
Hyperalgesia resulting from naloxone-precipitated opioid withdrawal was
blocked by RVM lidocaine (Kaplan and Fields, 1991 ) and associated with
increased discharge of cells thought to mediate facilitation (i.e.,
"ON" cells) (Bederson et al., 1990 ; Kim et al., 1990 ).
Similarly, tactile and thermal hypersensitivity resulting from
sustained delivery of subcutaneous morphine was abolished by RVM
microinjection of lidocaine or by bilateral lesions of the dorsolateral
funiculus (DLF), suggesting the importance of descending facilitatory
influences in opioid-induced abnormal pain (Vanderah et al., 2001b ).
Manipulations that blocked opioid-induced pain also blocked the
behavioral manifestation of opioid antinociceptive tolerance.
Opioid-induced abnormal pain and antinociceptive tolerance are also
characterized by an upregulation in spinal dynorphin content (Vanderah
et al., 2000 ). Spinal administration of dynorphin has been shown to
induce pain (Vanderah et al., 1996 ; Laughlin et al., 1997 ), and
spinal (+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo [a,d]
cyclohepten-5,10-imine maleate (MK-801) or dynorphin antiserum blocks morphine-induced abnormal pain and antinociceptive tolerance (Vanderah et al., 2000 ; Gardell et al., 2001 ). These studies suggest a
pronociceptive role for upregulated spinal dynorphin as a mediator of
opioid-induced pain.
Morphine-induced abnormal pain and antinociceptive tolerance is known
to be blocked by NMDA receptor antagonists (Mao et al., 1995a ,c ;
Larcher et al., 1998 ; Celerier et al., 1999 ; Laulin et al.,
1999 ). Although a common interpretation of these findings is an
interaction between opioid and NMDA receptors via intracellular mechanisms (Mao et al., 1995b ,c ,d ), an alternative possibility might be
the blockade of opioid-induced excitation. However, the source of
possible opioid-induced excitation is not known. Recently, Hargreaves
and colleagues suggested that non-opioid fragments of dynorphin can
enhance the evoked release of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in
isolated spinal cord tissues (Claude et al., 1999 ). The present study
was undertaken to test the hypothesis that the upregulation of spinal
dynorphin resulting from sustained morphine exposure acts to enhance
the evoked release of an excitatory transmitter from primary afferent
fibers. Additionally, the possible relationship between opioid-induced
descending facilitation and spinal dynorphin was explored.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Male Sprague Dawley rats (Harlan Sprague Dawley, Indianapolis,
IN), 200-300 gm at time of testing, were maintained in a
climate-controlled room on a 12 hr light/dark cycle (lights on at 6:00
A.M.) with food and water available ad libitum. All
testing was performed in accordance with the policies and
recommendations of the International Association for the Study of Pain
and the National Institutes of Health guidelines for the handling and
use of laboratory animals and received approval from the Institutional
Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Arizona. Groups of
5-10 rats were used in all experiments.
Sustained morphine administration. The sustained systemic
administration of morphine was accomplished by subcutaneous
implantation of two 75 mg free base pellets. Control groups received
placebo pellets containing excipient only. The pellets were obtained as a generous gift from the National Institute on Drug Abuse Drug Supply Program.
Behavioral thresholds. Behavioral responses to thermal and
tactile stimuli were determined before implantation of the pellets and
on the first or seventh day of pellet exposure (i.e., with the pellets
in place) to establish the possible presence of changes in tactile and
thermal response thresholds. The method of Hargreaves et al. (1988) was
used to assess paw-withdrawal latency to a thermal nociceptive
stimulus. Rats were allowed to acclimate within a Plexiglas enclosure
on a clear glass plate maintained at 30°C. A radiant heat source
(i.e., high-intensity projector lamp) was activated with a timer and
focused onto the plantar surface of the hindpaw. Paw-withdrawal latency
was determined by a motion detector that halted both lamp and timer
when the paw was withdrawn. A maximal cutoff of 40 sec was used to
prevent tissue damage. A significant reduction in paw-withdrawal
latency from the pre-pellet value was interpreted as thermal
hyperalgesia. Pairwise comparisons were performed with Student's
t test, and significance was set at p 0.05.
The paw-withdrawal thresholds of the hindpaws of the rats were
determined in response to probing with eight calibrated von Frey
filaments (Stoelting, Wood Dale, IL) in logarithmically spaced increments ranging from 0.41 to 15 gm (4-150 mN). Each filament was
applied perpendicularly to the plantar surface of the paw of rats kept
in suspended wire-mesh cages. Withdrawal threshold was determined by
sequentially increasing and decreasing the stimulus strength ("up and
down" method), analyzed using a Dixon nonparametric test (Dixon,
1980 ; Chaplan et al., 1994 ), and expressed as the mean withdrawal
threshold. A significant reduction in paw-withdrawal threshold from the
pre-pellet value indicated tactile hypersensitivity. Pairwise
comparisons were performed with Student's t test.
Significance was set at p 0.05.
Spinal DLF lesions. Bilateral spinal lesions at the
T8 level were performed in naive rats under
halothane anesthesia. A laminectomy was made at the
T8 level to expose the spinal cord. Lesions of the dorsolateral funiculus (DLF) were performed by crushing the area
with fine forceps under a dissecting microscope. Sham-DLF surgery was
performed by exposing the vertebrae and performing the laminectomy but
without cutting neuronal tissue. Hemostasis was confirmed, and the
wound over the exposed spinal cord was packed with Gelfoam and closed.
All lesions were verified histologically at the termination of the
experiment. Only rats with appropriately placed DLF lesions, determined
post hoc, were included in the subsequent data analysis.
Tissue extraction and preparation. Rats were deeply
anesthetized with halothane and decapitated. The spinal column was cut through at the pelvic girdle. Hydraulic extrusion was performed by
inserting a 16 gauge needle into the sacral vertebral canal and
expelling with ice-cold saline. The spinal cord was immediately placed
on ice in a glass Petri dish, and the dorsal half of the lumbar cord
was dissected. Tissue samples that were to be quantified for dynorphin
content were then immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at
70°C until assayed. Tissues for use in the CGRP release assay were
weighed and chopped into 0.2 mm cubes with a McIlwain tissue chopper
(Mickle Laboratory Engineering, Gomshall, UK).
CGRP release assays. Minced tissue samples were placed in a
1 cc chamber and continuously superfused with oxygenated modified Krebs' buffer (135 mM NaCl, 3.5 mM KCl, 1 mM
MgCl2, 20 mM
NaHCO3, 1 mM
NaHPO4, 2.5 mM
CaCl2, 3.3 mM dextrose, 0.1 mM ascorbic acid, 10 mM
thiorphan, and 0.1% bovine serum albumin) maintained at 37°C, pH
7.4, at a rate of 0.5 ml/min with a Brandel Superfusion Pump (Brandel,
Gaithersburg, MD). The tissue was allowed to equilibrate for 45 min.
Superfusate was collected in 3 min intervals into test tubes using a
fraction collector (Gilson, Middleton, WI). A total of four to five
fractions (12-15 min) were collected before adding capsaicin.
Capsaicin was then added for a perfusion concentration of 1 µM for 6 min (two fractions). Superfusate was
then collected for an additional 27-30 min (9-10 fractions).
Radioimmunoassay for CGRP in superfusate. The superfusate
obtained from the release assay was preincubated with 100 µl of a
C-terminally directed anti-CGRP antibody (generously donated by Dr.
Michael Iadarola, National Institutes of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD) for 24 hr at
4°C. The samples were each mixed with 100 µl of
[125I-Tyr0]CGRP28-37
(at 20,000-25,000 cpm per assay tube) and 50 µl of goat anti-rabbit
antiserum coupled to ferric beads and incubated for an additional 24 hr. The [125I]CGRP bound to the CGRP
antibody was separated from the free tracer through immunomagnetic
separation (PerSeptive Diagnostics, Cambridge, MA). The
immunoprecipitates were determined by gamma counting. Standard curves
were generated, and CGRP content was determined through logit-log
analysis. This assay has a minimal detection limit of 1-3 fmol/tube.
The CGRP antiserum used in these experiments binds near the C-terminal
end of CGRP and does not cross-react with cholecystokinin, neuropeptide
Y, or other peptides with similar C-terminal residues. The CGRP
concentrations were plotted against time in 3 min intervals. Evoked
release was calculated as the total amount of CGRP released (i.e.,
CGRP-IR) during the capsaicin infusion above the basal release
of CGRP.
Total CGRP content. Tissues were placed in 2 ml of 0.01N HCl
and homogenized using a Polytron, followed by centrifugation at
2500 × g for 20 min. The supernatant was diluted 1:400
in modified Krebs' buffer and then assayed for total CGRP content
using the radioimmunoassay described above. Pairwise comparisons
between treatments were detected using Student's t test.
Significance was determined at the p 0.05 level.
Dynorphin immunoassay. Tissues were placed in 1N acetic acid
and homogenized with a Polytron. The homogenates were incubated for 30 min at 95°C and centrifuged at 14,000 × g for 20 min
(4°C). The supernatants were lyophilized and stored at 70°C.
Protein concentrations were determined using the bichinchoninic acid
method with bovine serum albumin as a standard. Immunoassay was
performed using a commercial enzyme immunoassay system for dynorphin
A(1-17) (Bachem/Peninsula Labs, Torrance, CA).
Standard curves were constructed using the software Prizm (GraphPad,
San Diego, CA). Pairwise comparisons between treatments were detected
using Student's t test. Significance was determined at the
p 0.05 level.
Dynorphin antiserum. The anti-dynorphin antiserum that was
used to neutralize dynorphin in the release experiments was raised against dynorphin A(1-13) (item #T-4278.0500;
Bachem/Peninsula Labs). This antiserum demonstrates 100%
cross-reactivity with dynorphin A(1-17) and
dynorphin A(1-12) fragments. Control serum
refers to serum from rabbits that have not been exposed the antigen.
Immunofluorescence. After the anesthesia with ketamine
HCl/xylazine (1 ml/kg; Sigma; St. Louis, MO), the rats were
perfused transcardially with 0.1 M PBS until the
exudate ran clear and fixed with 10% formalin and 0.05%
glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M PBS, pH 7.4, for ~15
min. Lumbar spinal cords were harvested and postfixed in 10% formalin
overnight and cryoprotected with 20% sucrose in 0.1 M PBS. Frozen frontal sections (20 µm) were
washed in 0.1 M PBS and then incubated with a
rabbit anti-CGRP antiserum (1:40,000; Bachem/Peninsula Labs) in
0.1 M PBS with 5% normal goat serum overnight at
4°C, followed by washing and secondary incubation with a
Cy3-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:500; Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) for 2 hr. The sections were rinsed and mounted in
Vectashield. Fluorescence digital images were captured using a Nikon
(Tokyo, Japan) E800 fluorescence microscope outfitted with a Hamamatsu
(Bridgewater, NJ) C5810 color CCD camera that output to a Pentium microcomputer.
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RESULTS |
Evaluation of tactile and thermal thresholds after placebo or
morphine pellets
The mean pretreatment (i.e., baseline) paw-withdrawal threshold to
probing of the hindpaw with von Frey filaments was 15 ± 0 gm, and
the paw-withdrawal latency to noxious radiant heat applied to the
plantar aspect of the hindpaw was 20.8 ± 0.26 sec. Rats with
morphine pellets demonstrated a significantly reduced mean paw-withdrawal threshold of 4.53 ± 0.74 gm
(p 0.05) 7 d after pellet implantation.
Similarly, these animals also showed a significant reduction in the
mean paw-withdrawal latency of 13.9 ± 1.02 sec (p 0.05). Previous studies have shown that
the development of tactile and thermal hypersensitivity after morphine
pellet implantation is time related. Vanderah et al. (2001) showed that
the response thresholds to tactile and thermal stimulation were
modestly reduced from pretreatment values within 1 d after
morphine exposure but did not achieve a maximal level of change until
day 7. In the present studies, the paw-withdrawal threshold was reduced
from a baseline of 15.0 ± 0 to 13.1 ± 1.4 gm at day 1 after
morphine pellets. Similarly, paw-withdrawal latencies were essentially unchanged with baseline values of 21.0 ± 0.6 and 20.15 ± 0.6 sec at day 1 after morphine pellets. These tactile and thermal
threshold values at day 1 post-morphine pellets were not significantly
different from the pre-pellet baseline (p > 0.05; Student's t test). In control rats that received
placebo pellets, the mean paw-withdrawal threshold (15 ± 0 and
14.5 ± 0.5 gm at 1 and 7 d, respectively), and the mean
paw-withdrawal latency (21.2 ± 0.51 and 20.6 ± 0.66 sec at
1 and 7 d, respectively) were not significantly different from the
respective pre-pellet values (p > 0.05). These
results suggest that exposure to subcutaneous morphine pellets elicits enhanced pain that is firmly established by post-pellet day 7, with
earlier time points likely representing a time-related transitional period of sensory thresholds (Vanderah et al., 2001).
Morphine-induced upregulation of spinal dynorphin-IR is blocked by
DLF lesions
Rats were prepared with bilateral DLF, or sham-DLF, lesions and
were implanted with either placebo or morphine pellets 2 d after
the surgical procedures. On the seventh day after pellet implantation,
the dorsal halves of the lumbar spinal cords were removed and assayed
for dynorphin content. The sustained exposure to morphine in rats with
sham-DLF lesions produced a significantly greater
(p 0.05) spinal dynorphin content relative to
the placebo-pelleted control group (Fig.
1). The dynorphin-IR levels were 384 ± 18 and 296 ± 12 fmol/mg protein in the morphine- and
placebo-treated sham-DLF groups, respectively (Fig. 1). In rats that
had bilateral DLF lesions before morphine pellet implantation, however,
the dynorphin level was 292 ± 8 fmol/mg protein, which was not
significantly different (p > 0.05) from that of
the placebo-pelleted, sham-lesioned control group (Fig. 1). Lesions of
the DLF alone did not alter spinal dynorphin expression. Rats implanted
with placebo pellets that also received DLF lesion had a mean dynorphin
content of 282 ± 8 fmol/mg protein, which was not significantly
different (p > 0.05) from that of the
placebo-pelleted, sham-lesioned control group (Fig. 1). Thus, sustained
morphine exposure induced an enhanced level of spinal dynorphin-IR that
could be prevented by bilateral lesion of the DLF.

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Figure 1.
Male Sprague Dawley rats received bilateral
lesions of the DLF or sham surgery at T8 and were allowed
to recover for 2 d. The animals were then implanted with two
subcutaneous placebo or morphine (75 mg) pellets. After 7 d, the
spinal cords were removed, and the dorsal halves of the lumbar cords
were assayed for dynorphin immunoreactivity. The dorsal lumbar cords of
rats with morphine pellets and sham-DLF lesions showed significantly
greater levels of dynorphin (*p 0.05) than
tissues from rats with placebo pellets and sham-DLF lesions. The levels
of spinal dynorphin from the rats with placebo pellets and DLF lesions
were not different from those seen in tissues from rats with placebo
pellets and sham-DLF lesion (p > 0.5).
Morphine pellets failed to significantly increase the levels of
dynorphin in spinal tissues taken from animals with DLF lesions. These
levels were not different from those seen with placebo pellets and DLF
lesion or from placebo pellets and sham-DLF lesion. Each treatment
group consisted of six animals.
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Sustained morphine exposure enhances CGRP content
Sustained morphine exposure also produced an upregulation of
immunoreactivity for CGRP in the lumbar dorsal horn of the spinal cord
(Fig. 2) in a time-dependent manner.
Enhanced fluorescence labeling for CGRP was seen in the dorsal horn
7 d (Fig. 2D), but not 1 d (Fig.
2B), after morphine pellet implantation when compared with that seen in tissues from placebo-pelleted rats at
post-implantation days 1 and 7 (Fig.
2A,C, respectively) (preabsorbed
control not shown). CGRP was confined bilaterally to the outer
laminas (I and II) of the spinal dorsal horn in placebo rats and
rats that were exposed to morphine for 1 d (Fig.
2A-C). Tissues taken from rats after 7 d of
morphine pellet implantation, however, showed that the CGRP was more
intense in the outer laminas of the dorsal horn, and the immunolabeling
could be seen to extend into deeper laminas (Fig.
2D).

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Figure 2.
CGRP immunoreactivity in the spinal cord at
approximately L5. Tissue from placebo-treated rats is shown in the
left column, and that from morphine-treated rats is
shown in the right column. No apparent difference in
CGRP immunoreactivity is seen between the spinal sections obtained from
placebo-treated and morphine-treated rats 1 d after pellet
implantation. The staining intensity of CGRP in tissues from
morphine-treated rats on day 7 is enhanced when compared with the
placebo-treated rats on day 7. The enhanced staining is apparent in
both laminas I/II and in deeper laminas. Scale bar, 400 µm.
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CGRP in the dorsal horn was quantified by radioimmunoassay of spinal
cord extracts in separate parallel assays from placebo- and
morphine-pelleted rats after day 1, and again after day 7, of pellet
implantation. CGRP content was determined to be 1120 ± 58 and
1336 ± 81 pmol/gm tissue in spinal tissues from 1 d placebo- and morphine-pelleted rats, respectively (n = 6 rats
per group). When compared with the day 1 placebo-pelleted control
group, the morphine-pelleted group on day 1 showed a 19 ± 7.5%
increase in CGRP; this difference was small but statistically
significant (p 0.05). CGRP content was
determined to be 2455 ± 309 and 6451 ± 595 pmol/gm tissue
in spinal tissues from 7 d placebo- and morphine-pelleted rats,
respectively (n = 8 rats per group). When compared with the 7 d placebo-pelleted control group, the morphine-pelleted group on day 7 showed a 163 ± 24% increase in CGRP, a difference that was statistically significant (p 0.05).
These data are in good agreement with the immunohistochemical analysis
of CGRP after 1 or 7 d of morphine exposure.
Sustained morphine exposure enhances capsaicin-evoked, but
not basal, release of CGRP
Basal CGRP release was measured in tissues taken from rats 1 or
7 d after implantation of placebo or morphine pellets. No differences were observed in unstimulated release in these groups (Fig.
3A). Capsaicin-stimulated
release of CGRP in tissues taken from rats 1 d after placebo
pellets did not differ significantly from that observed in tissues
taken from rats 7 d after placebo pellets (Fig.
3A,B). Similarly, the
capsaicin-stimulated release of CGRP observed in tissues taken from
rats 1 d after morphine pellets did not differ significantly from
that observed from tissue taken from placebo-pelleted rats at either
time point (Fig. 3A,B). In
contrast, capsaicin-evoked release of CGRP in tissues taken from rats
7 d after morphine pellets was significantly greater than that
seen in either the placebo- or morphine-pelleted day 1 tissues (Fig.
3A,B). For comparison purposes,
evoked post-placebo pellet day 1 CGRP release was normalized as
100 ± 27%. Under the same conditions, the evoked CGRP released
from spinal dorsal horn tissue harvested 1 d after morphine pellet
implantation was 112 ± 38% of this control group (difference not
significant). Similarly, evoked post-placebo pellet day 7 CGRP was
normalized as 100 ± 31%. Under the same conditions, the evoked
CGRP released from spinal dorsal horn tissues harvested 7 d after
morphine pellets was 270 ± 49% of this control
(p 0.05).

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Figure 3.
Male Sprague Dawley rats were implanted with two
placebo pellets or morphine pellets. Separate groups were killed
1 and 7 d after pellet implantation, and dorsal lumbar spinal cord
tissues were isolated, minced, and placed in perfusion chambers.
A shows the basal and evoked CGRP in the perfusate
collected at 3 min intervals. The horizontal bar
represents the period in which capsaicin (1 µM) was added
to the perfusate to evoke CGRP release. The capsaicin-evoked release of
CGRP from the spinal tissues in vitro is demonstrated in
B and represents the amount of CGRP above the baseline
release for each individual group. Basal levels of CGRP release did not
differ among the treatment groups. Evoked CGRP release was not
different between tissues from placebo- and morphine-treated groups at
day 1 after pellet implantation (p > 0.5).
However, tissues from the 7 d morphine-treated group showed a
significantly greater level of capsaicin-evoked release of CGRP
(*p 0.05). Each treatment group consisted of six
animals.
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Enhanced evoked released CGRP in tissues from
morphine-exposed rats is blocked by previous bilateral DLF lesions
Tissues were taken 7 d after placebo or morphine pellet
implantation from rats with previous sham-DLF or DLF lesions for
evaluation of basal and evoked CGRP release. No differences were
observed in unstimulated release in these groups (Fig.
4A).
Capsaicin-stimulated release of CGRP in tissues from placebo-pelleted
sham-DLF rats did not differ significantly from that observed in
tissues from placebo-pelleted DLF rats (Fig. 4A).
Evoked CGRP release in tissues taken from sham-DLF morphine-pelleted
rats was significantly higher than that observed from tissues from
either of the placebo-pelleted groups (p 0.05) (Fig. 4B). In contrast, evoked CGRP release in
tissues taken from DLF morphine-pelleted rats was not significantly different from that observed in tissues from the placebo-pelleted groups and was significantly lower than that seen in tissues from the
sham-DLF morphine-pelleted group (p 0.05)
(Fig. 4B). For comparison purposes, evoked CGRP
release in sham-DLF placebo-pelleted tissues was normalized as 100 ± 20%. The evoked CGRP release in sham-DLF morphine-pelleted tissues
was 210 ± 28% of this control group (p 0.05). Similarly, evoked CGRP release in DLF placebo-pelleted tissues
was normalized as 100 ± 25%. The evoked CGRP release in DLF
morphine-pelleted tissues was 78 ± 16 of this control group (difference not significant).

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Figure 4.
Male Sprague Dawley rats received bilateral
lesions of the DLF or sham surgery at T8 and were allowed to recover
for 2 d. The animals were then implanted with two subcutaneous
placebo or morphine (75 mg) pellets. Seven days after pellet
implantation, the spinal cords were removed, and the dorsal halves of
the lumbar cords were assayed for basal and evoked CGRP release. The
horizontal bar in A represents the period
in which capsaicin (1 µM) was added to the perfusate to
evoke the release of CGRP. Basal CGRP release was not different among
the treatment groups. In tissues from the sham-DLF-lesioned and
morphine-treated rats (n = 11), capsaicin-evoked
release of CGRP was significantly (*p 0.05)
greater when compared with the sham-DLF, placebo-treated group
(n = 11). Tissues from rats with DLF lesion and
placebo pellets (n = 10) did not show significantly
different levels of evoked CGRP release when compared with tissues from
sham-DLF and placebo pellets. However, tissues from rats with bilateral
DLF lesion and morphine pellets (n = 8) showed
levels of evoked CGRP that were not significantly different from the
DLF-lesioned placebo group or the sham-DLF-lesioned placebo
group.
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Enhanced capsaicin-evoked released CGRP in tissues from
morphine-exposed rats is blocked by anti-dynorphin antiserum
Neither control serum nor anti-dynorphin antiserum (1 mg/100 ml)
produced any change in basal release of CGRP in tissues taken 7 d
after placebo or morphine pellets (n = 10 per group;
data not shown). As noted previously, no differences were observed in
unstimulated CGRP release in tissues taken 7 d after placebo or
morphine pellet implantation (Fig.
5A). Evoked CGRP release in
tissues taken from placebo-pelleted rats did not differ significantly from that observed from tissues taken from placebo-pelleted rats in the
presence of control serum or dynorphin antiserum (Fig. 5A).
Evoked CGRP release in tissues taken from morphine-pelleted rats did
not differ significantly from that observed in tissues taken from
morphine-pelleted rats in the presence of control serum (Fig.
5A), but evoked release in both of these groups was
significantly greater than that observed in the placebo-pelleted groups
in the absence or presence of control serum. In contrast, evoked CGRP release in tissues taken from morphine-pelleted rats in the presence of
anti-dynorphin antiserum was significantly lower than the evoked CGRP
release observed in tissues taken from morphine-pelleted rats in the
absence or presence of control serum (p 0.05)
and not significantly different from that observed in placebo-pelleted tissues in the absence or presence of control serum (Fig.
5A,B). For comparison purposes,
evoked CGRP release in placebo-pelleted tissues was normalized as
100 ± 15%. Evoked CGRP release in morphine-pelleted tissues was
found to be 197 ± 26% of this control group
(p 0.05). Similarly, evoked CGRP release in
tissues taken from placebo-pelleted rats in the presence of control
serum was normalized as 100 ± 12%. Evoked CGRP release in the
presence of control serum in tissues taken from morphine-pelleted rats
was 182 ± 12% (p 0.05). Evoked CGRP
release in the presence of dynorphin antiserum in tissues from
placebo-pelleted rats was normalized as 100 ± 17%. Evoked CGRP
release in the presence of anti-dynorphin antiserum in tissues from
morphine-pelleted rats was found to be 102 ± 22% of control, a
value that was not significantly different.

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Figure 5.
Male Sprague Dawley rats were implanted with two
subcutaneous placebo or morphine pellets and killed 7 d after
pellet implantation. The dorsal lumbar spinal cord tissue was
dissected, minced, and placed in perfusion chambers. Basal and evoked
CGRP released into the perfusate was measured at 3 min intervals
(A), and capsaicin-evoked CGRP release was
indicated by the amount of CGRP present above the baseline release
levels (B). The horizontal bars in
A represents the period in which capsaicin (1 µM) and dynorphin antiserum (1 mg/100 ml) (Dyn
A/S) or a rabbit control serum (1 mg/100 ml) were added
to the perfusate. Basal levels of CGRP release were not significantly
different among the treatment groups. In separate experiments, neither
dynorphin antiserum nor control serum (CS) altered basal
CGRP release (data not shown). Capsaicin-evoked release of CGRP was
significantly greater in tissues from morphine-treated rats 7 d
after pellet implantation when compared with the placebo-treated group
(*p 0.05). Coadministration of capsaicin and
control serum to the perfusion medium did not alter the
capsaicin-evoked release of CGRP from tissues obtained from either
placebo or morphine-treated rats; evoked CGRP release in the
morphine-treated tissues was significantly greater than that seen in
the placebo-pelleted group. Coadministration of capsaicin and a
dynorphin antiserum to the perfusion medium prevented the enhanced
capsaicin-evoked release of CGRP in tissues from morphine-treated rats
such that the level of release was not different from the placebo
control group. Each treatment group consisted of 10 animals.
|
|
Dynorphin A(2-13), a non-opioid dynorphin fragment,
enhances capsaicin-evoked released CGRP in naive tissue
The possibility that pharmacological application of dynorphin
A(2-13) might mimic the apparent facilitatory
effects of upregulated endogenous spinal dynorphin elicited by
sustained morphine treatment was tested. Basal and capsaicin-evoked
CGRP release from spinal tissues harvested from naive rats was measured in the absence and presence of dynorphin
A(2-13). Dynorphin A(2-13) (1 µM) applied to the
superfusate in the absence of capsaicin did not evoke significant
release of CGRP above the basal value (data not shown). In contrast,
application of dynorphin A(2-13) (1 µM) significantly enhanced capsaicin-evoked CGRP release
(Fig.
6A,B).
For comparison, the mean evoked release of CGRP by 1 µM capsaicin was normalized to 100 ± 18%. Superfusion of capsaicin with dynorphin
A(2-13) resulted in an evoked CGRP release of
336 ± 96% (p 0.05) of this control
group (Fig. 6).

View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
Capsaicin (1 µM)-evoked release of
CGRP from the dorsal lumbar spinal cord slices harvested from male
Sprague Dawley rats was significantly enhanced in the presence of
dynorphin A(2-13), a non-opioid fragment. CGRP release was
measured at 3 min intervals (A), and
capsaicin-evoked CGRP release was indicated by the amount of CGRP
present above the baseline release levels (B).
The horizontal bars in A represent the
period in which capsaicin (1 µM) and dynorphin
A(2-13) (1 µM) were added to the perfusate
to evoke release of CGRP. CGRP released from the tissues induced by
capsaicin was significantly enhanced by the coadministration of 1 µM of a non-opioid fragment, dynorphin
A(2-13) (*p 0.05). Each treatment
group consisted of 10 animals.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The results of the present study demonstrate the remarkable
plasticity induced in the nervous system after sustained exposure to
morphine. The present data confirm and extend previous findings indicating that morphine exposure significantly upregulates spinal dynorphin (Vanderah et al., 2000 ) and CGRP in vivo (Menard
et al., 1996 ; Powell et al., 2000 ) and in vitro (Ma et al.,
2000 , 2001 ). The increase in expression of these substances appears to
be of functional significance, providing a physiological basis for
increased stimulus-induced excitation to the spinal cord that may
underlie paradoxical opioid-induced pain. Several novel insights can be
gleaned from these data that impact our understanding of opioid-induced
paradoxical pain and possibly the behavioral manifestation of
antinociceptive tolerance. First, the enhanced expression of spinal
dynorphin produced by sustained morphine exposure requires descending
influences via the DLF. Second, sustained morphine exposure results in
enhanced content and evoked release of CGRP. Third, pharmacological
application of non-opioid fragments of dynorphin enhance
capsaicin-evoked release of CGRP, confirming the observations of
Hargreaves and colleagues (Claude et al., 1999 ) and providing a
possible basis for the increased evoked CGRP release measured in
tissues from morphine-pelleted rats. Fourth, the increase in evoked
CGRP release from spinal tissues taken from morphine-exposed rats is
blocked by antiserum to dynorphin but not by a control serum,
implicating endogenous dynorphin in this effect. Finally, manipulations
that block the upregulation of spinal dynorphin resulting from morphine
pellets, namely bilateral DLF lesions, also block the enhanced evoked
CGRP release observed in tissues taken from morphine-pelleted rats.
Together, these data support the hypothesis that morphine-induced
upregulation of spinal dynorphin results secondary to plasticity in the
RVM and that dynorphin acts in a non-opioid manner to enhance the evoked release of excitatory transmitters from primary afferent fibers.
Because DLF lesions and dynorphin antiserum are manipulations that have
been also been shown to block opioid-induced pain and antinociceptive
tolerance (Vanderah et al., 2000 , 2001b ), it seems reasonable to
suggest that enhanced evoked excitatory transmitter release may be an
important factor that underlies opioid-induced paradoxical pain and the
subsequent expression of antinociceptive tolerance.
The supraspinally mediated facilitation of nociceptive inputs at the
level of the spinal cord is well recognized (Fields, 1992 ; Zhuo and
Gebhart, 1992 ; Urban et al., 1996 ; Urban and Gebhart, 1997 ; Porreca et
al., 2002 ). Based on observations with microinjection of lidocaine and
lesions of the DLF, an exaggerated persistence of such tonically active
descending facilitation from the RVM has been suggested to be critical
for the expression of morphine-induced paradoxical pain and
antinociceptive tolerance (Tortorici et al., 2001 ; Vanderah et al.,
2001a ,b ). Spinopetal projections from the RVM are known to descend
through the DLF (Fields and Basbaum, 1999 ), suggesting the possibility
that such descending influences may elicit changes at the spinal level.
Although descending facilitation may promote nociceptive inputs
directly, such influences may also promote pain indirectly, perhaps by
invoking the upregulation of pronociceptive substances, such as
dynorphin, in the spinal cord (Ossipov et al., 2001 ; Vanderah et al.,
2001a ). Studies have demonstrated repeatedly that persistent exposure
to morphine strongly upregulates spinal dynorphin content (Nylander et
al., 1995 ; Rattan and Tejwani, 1997 ; Vanderah et al., 2000 , 2001a ;
Gardell et al., 2001 ). The present study extends these previous
observations by demonstrating the regulatory influences of descending
projections as disruption of the DLF blocks opioid-induced upregulation
of spinal dynorphin. Importantly, lesions of the DLF also prevents the
development of enhanced capsaicin-evoked release of CGRP observed in
spinal tissues taken from morphine-treated rats. It therefore appears
that the neuroplasticity of the RVM that has been suggested to result
in descending facilitation also elicits the upregulation of spinal
dynorphin and subsequently increases evoked neurotransmitter release,
suggesting a strong functional link among these three phenomena and
ultimately the behavioral consequences of morphine exposure.
The role of spinal dynorphin as a possible mediator of pain resulting
from sustained morphine exposure is also supported by these, and
previous, findings. Mice with deletions of the gene coding for
prodynorphin fail to develop antinociceptive tolerance or behavioral
signs of abnormal pain in response to morphine pellet implantation
(Gardell et al., 2001 ). Furthermore, the spinal injection of MK-801 or
of antiserum to dynorphin blocked enhanced pain and antinociceptive
tolerance in the wild-type littermates (Gardell et al., 2001 ), as well
as in morphine-exposed rats (Vanderah et al., 2000 ). Despite these
observations, the precise mechanisms by which spinal dynorphin might
mediate these effects have not been clear. Evidence for an excitatory
action of spinal dynorphin has been supported by the observation of
pharmacologically induced pain (Vanderah et al., 1996 ; Laughlin et al.,
1997 ) and by observations demonstrating that pharmacological dynorphin
A(1-13) evoked an increased release of glutamate
and aspartate into the extracellular fluid of the spinal cord (Skilling
et al., 1992 ). These dynorphin effects were blocked by MK-801,
suggesting an NMDA-receptor mediated action (Skilling et al., 1992 ;
Vanderah et al., 1996 ; Laughlin et al., 1997 ). Furthermore, infusion of
dynorphin A(1-17) and the des-Tyr
derivative dynorphin A(2-17), which is devoid of
binding affinity to opioid receptors, into hippocampal tissue through a
microdialysis probe produced dose-dependent release of glutamate and
aspartate, and this effect was not blocked by opioid antagonists
(Faden, 1992 ). Dynorphin A(1-17) potentiates the
capsaicin-evoked release of substance P (SP) from caudal trigeminal nuclear slices, and this effect was not blocked by µ-, -, or -opioid receptor antagonists but was blocked by NMDA
antagonists (Arcaya et al., 1999 ). Furthermore, neonatal capsaicin,
which selectively destroys SP-containing primary afferents, blocked the
ability of dynorphin to facilitate
K+-evoked release of SP in trigeminal
slices (Arcaya et al., 1999 ). It was concluded that dynorphin enhances
the release of SP from primary afferent C-fibers through an
NMDA-related mechanism to promote exaggerated pain (Arcaya et al.,
1999 ). Hargreaves and colleagues have demonstrated recently enhanced
capsaicin-evoked release of CGRP by dynorphin
A(2-13) from naive rat spinal cord sections
(Claude et al., 1999 ). This observation was confirmed in the present
investigation and extended to encompass the role of endogenous
dynorphin upregulated in the spinal cord after morphine treatment.
A possible basis for the enhanced evoked release of CGRP seen in
tissues from morphine-exposed rats is the increased content of CGRP
evident in both the spinal cord and the dorsal root ganglia. Increased
spinal CGRP appeared to extend into deeper laminas of the spinal dorsal
horn after morphine treatment. The reasons for this are not clear.
Preliminary evidence suggests that the apparent number of CGRP-positive
cells in the dorsal root ganglion is increased after morphine
treatment. However, the nature of these cells (i.e., size and
phenotype) awaits further characterization. Dynorphin can
pharmacologically enhance the evoked release of CGRP from naive tissue,
suggesting that upregulated content is not necessary. It is not clear
whether the enhanced evoked release of CGRP seen in tissues from
morphine-exposed rats, in which there is enhanced expression of
endogenous dynorphin, results from the actions of dynorphin alone or
depends also on the upregulation of CGRP. Nevertheless, the critical
importance of spinal dynorphin is supported by the blockade of enhanced
evoked release in morphine-exposed tissues by anti-dynorphin antiserum.
Anti-dynorphin antiserum did not block evoked CGRP release in naive or
placebo-pelleted tissues. Additionally, no enhanced evoked CGRP release
was observed in tissues taken from morphine-exposed animals with
previous lesions of the DLF. DLF or sham lesion did not alter evoked
CGRP release in placebo-pelleted rats. This finding also demonstrates
that the increased release of CGRP seen in tissues from
morphine-exposed rats was not the result of an in vitro
expression of opioid withdrawal. This conclusion is supported by the
fact that tissues taken from rats with previous DLF lesions had been
exposed to morphine in exactly the same way as those without DLF
lesion. Also supporting this conclusion is the failure to demonstrate
differences in basal (i.e., unstimulated) CGRP release in tissues from
morphine- or placebo-pelleted rats. The latter observation also argues
against possible "sensitization" of the release mechanisms in the
afferent fibers after morphine treatment.
The molecular mechanisms by which dynorphin or its non-opioid fragments
may enhance evoked release from primary afferents remain to be
elucidated (for review, see Lai et al., 2001 ; Vanderah et al., 2001a ).
However, the actions of dynorphin, upregulated after sustained opioid
exposure, appear to promote excitation, abnormal pain, and
antinociceptive tolerance. Blockade of dynorphin actions or expression
has been shown to block opioid abnormal pain and antinociceptive
tolerance. In this regard, these findings are consistent with most of
the actions of many other classes of substances that have been reported
to block opioid antinociceptive tolerance. These substances most
commonly block endogenous substrates that promote excitation and pain
(for review, see Vanderah et al., 2001). Because pain can be regarded
as a "physiological antagonist" of opioid antinociception, the
present findings provide at least one possible basis for increased pain
after sustained exposure to opioids and may allow new approaches for
preventing the expression of opioid antinociceptive tolerance.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received March 26, 2002; revised May 2, 2002; accepted May 10, 2002.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant DA 12656.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Frank Porreca, Department of
Pharmacology, College of Medicine, University of Arizona Health
Sciences Center, Tucson, AZ 85724. E-mail: frankp{at}u.arizona.edu.
 |
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T. Engelhardt, C. Zaarour, B. Naser, C. Pehora, J. de Ruiter, A. Howard, and M. W. Crawford
Intraoperative Low-Dose Ketamine Does Not Prevent a Remifentanil-Induced Increase in Morphine Requirement After Pediatric Scoliosis Surgery
Anesth. Analg.,
October 1, 2008;
107(4):
1170 - 1175.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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L. A. Grande, B. R. O'Donnell, D. R. Fitzgibbon, and G. W. Terman
Ultra-Low Dose Ketamine and Memantine Treatment for Pain in an Opioid-Tolerant Oncology Patient
Anesth. Analg.,
October 1, 2008;
107(4):
1380 - 1383.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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Y. Chen, C. Geis, and C. Sommer
Activation of TRPV1 Contributes to Morphine Tolerance: Involvement of the Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Signaling Pathway
J. Neurosci.,
May 28, 2008;
28(22):
5836 - 5845.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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M. P. Davis, L. A. Shaiova, and M. S. Angst
When Opioids Cause Pain
J. Clin. Oncol.,
October 1, 2007;
25(28):
4497 - 4498.
[Full Text]
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M. H. Ossipov, I. Bazov, L. R. Gardell, J. Kowal, T. Yakovleva, I. Usynin, T. J. Ekstrom, F. Porreca, and G. Bakalkin
Control of Chronic Pain by the Ubiquitin Proteasome System in the Spinal Cord
J. Neurosci.,
August 1, 2007;
27(31):
8226 - 8237.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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M. W. Crawford, C. Hickey, C. Zaarour, A. Howard, and B. Naser
Development of acute opioid tolerance during infusion of remifentanil for pediatric scoliosis surgery.
Anesth. Analg.,
June 1, 2006;
102(6):
1662 - 1667.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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A. Dogrul, E. J. Bilsky, M. H. Ossipov, J. Lai, and F. Porreca
Spinal L-Type Calcium Channel Blockade Abolishes Opioid-Induced Sensory Hypersensitivity and Antinociceptive Tolerance
Anesth. Analg.,
December 1, 2005;
101(6):
1730 - 1735.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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M. M. Heinricher and M. J. Neubert
Neural Basis for the Hyperalgesic Action of Cholecystokinin in the Rostral Ventromedial Medulla
J Neurophysiol,
October 1, 2004;
92(4):
1982 - 1989.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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L. Koetzner, X.-Y. Hua, J. Lai, F. Porreca, and T. Yaksh
Nonopioid Actions of Intrathecal Dynorphin Evoke Spinal Excitatory Amino Acid and Prostaglandin E2 Release Mediated by Cyclooxygenase-1 and -2
J. Neurosci.,
February 11, 2004;
24(6):
1451 - 1458.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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L. R. Gardell, T. W. Vanderah, S. E. Gardell, R. Wang, M. H. Ossipov, J. Lai, and F. Porreca
Enhanced Evoked Excitatory Transmitter Release in Experimental Neuropathy Requires Descending Facilitation
J. Neurosci.,
September 10, 2003;
23(23):
8370 - 8379.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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