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Journal of Pharmacology And Experimental Therapeutics Fast Forward
First published on February 16, 2007; DOI: 10.1124/jpet.106.118505


0022-3565/07/3212-635-641$20.00
JPET 321:635-641, 2007
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NEUROPHARMACOLOGY

Sex-/Ovarian Steroid-Dependent Release of Endomorphin 2 from Spinal Cord

Daya S. Gupta, Hans von Gizycki, and Alan R. Gintzler

Departments of Biochemistry (D.S.G., A.R.G.) and Scientific Computing (H.v.G.), State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York

µ-Opioid receptor (MOR) agonists have been shown to be more potent analgesics in male than female rodents. Regulation of spinal MOR-coupled antinociception by 17beta-estradiol (estrogen, E2) and progesterone (P) is also sexually dimorphic; pregnancy levels of E2/P activate MOR-coupled analgesic pathways in male but not female rats. We hypothesized that the sexual dimorphic characteristics of MOR-coupled antinociception reflects sexual dimorphism in the regulation of the release from spinal cord of the endogenous MOR agonist, endomorphin 2 (EM2). Parameters of spinal EM2 release manifesting sexual dimorphism include its 1) magnitude: in vitro basal and K+-evoked release of EM2 from spinal tissue of male rats is approximately 50% greater than that observed from spinal cord of females; 2) modulation by ovarian sex steroids: E2/P treatment significantly enhanced K+-evoked EM2 release from spinal tissue of males, but not females; and 3) enhancement by opioid receptor blockade: naloxone enhanced stimulated EM2 release from spinal tissue of both males and females, but it augmented basal release from spinal tissue of only males. Enhancement of EM2 release by naloxone reflects negative coupling of MOR to EM2 release and hence its modulation by negative feedback since only activation of MOR, not {kappa}-or {delta}-opioid receptors, was able to inhibit evoked EM2 release. These data reveal that the EM2-MOR spinal analgesic system is more robust and "higher gain" in male versus female rodents. These findings could provide a mechanistic rubric for understanding the male female dichotomy in prevalence and intensity of chronic pain syndromes.


Received for publication December 12, 2006
Accepted February 8, 2007.

Address correspondence to: Dr. Alan Gintzler, Box 8, Department of Biochemistry, State University of New York Downstate Medical Center, 450 Clarkson Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11203. E-mail: alan.gintzler{at}downstate.edu




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