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Vol. 287, Issue 3, 937-943, December 1998
Department of Pharmacology, Louisiana State University Medical
Center, Shreveport, Louisiana
When coadministered spinally, morphine and clonidine interact
synergistically to produce antinociception. The mechanism for the
synergism is unknown, but may depend on intracellular messenger systems. Agents that alter the activities of protein kinases alter antinociception produced by opioids, but their effects on
clonidine-induced antinociception or the morphine/clonidine interaction
are not known. In these studies, mice were pretreated intrathecally
with inhibitors or activators of protein kinase C and cyclic
AMP-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase A). Antinociceptive
responses to intrathecally administered morphine, clonidine and
morphine/clonidine combinations were then measured in the radiant heat
tail flick test. Inhibition of protein kinase C activity with
chelerythrine or calphostin C changed the morphine/clonidine
interaction from synergistic to additive. Inhibition of protein kinase
A activity with H-89 did not alter the morphine/clonidine interaction,
it remained synergistic. Stimulation of protein kinase C activity with
phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate attenuated morphine antinociception, but did
not alter the synergistic interaction. Increasing spinal cyclic
AMP concentrations with either forskolin or rolipram attenuated the antinociception produced by separately administered morphine and
clonidine, but had no effect on the morphine/clonidine interaction. These results suggest that protein kinase C activity may regulate the
interaction between spinal opioid and alpha-2 receptors,
stimulated by morphine and clonidine.
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