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Vol. 281, Issue 3, 1219-1225, 1997
Department of Anesthesiology, University of California, San Diego, LaJolla, California
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Abstract |
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MK801 (MK), an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, attenuates tolerance to spinal opioids. Whether this applies to other G-protein-coupled receptor systems is unknown. This study examines the effects of continuous spinal MK on tolerance to the antinociceptive effect of continuous spinal infusion of the alpha-2 agonist ST91 (ST). Intrathecal (i.t.) infusion pumps were implanted in rats which delivered for 7 days: saline (1 µl/h); ST (40 nmol/µl/h); MK (10 nmol/µl/h) + ST (40 nmol/µl/h); or MK (10 nmol/µl/h). Antinociception was measured daily on the hot plate. On day 8, groups received i.t. boluses of ST to generate dose-response curves. A separate ST-infused group received MK (10 nmol i.t.) on day 7. Each group received ST (40 nmol i.t.) 7 days after discontinuation of infusion. Co-infusion of MK with ST resulted in attenuation of the right shift in dose response seen in ST-infused rats and a small preservation of effect on daily testing. However, MK-infused rats showed a significant left shift in ST dose response. Acutely administered, MK did not restore ST sensitivity. One week after cessation of infusion, ST and ST + MK groups showed shorter duration of effect after i.t. ST bolus than controls. In conclusion, chronic spinal MK partially attenuates loss of sensitivity to chronic spinal ST. This supports the hypothesis that opioid- and adrenoceptor-induced tolerances are similarly modulated by the NMDA receptor. However, the increased sensitivity induced by MK alone suggests that NMDA receptor antagonism may not prevent the development of tolerance itself but may alter the expression of tolerance by inducing sensitivity via other alterations in cellular function.
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Introduction |
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The intrathecal delivery of
opioid and alpha-2 agonists will yield a potent
dose-dependent antinociception with a clearly defined agonist and
antagonist pharmacology (Reddy et al., 1980
; Yaksh and
Reddy, 1981
). Studies on the mechanisms of action of these families of
agents have revealed similar underlying spinal mechanisms: 1) both
exert a potent presynaptic effect on the release of transmitter from
small primary afferents and 2) both are coupled by a G protein to
increase potassium conductance which leads to a hyperpolarization of
the membrane (Yaksh 1993
; Yaksh et al., 1993
).
In addition to the mechanistic similarities of opioid and
alpha-2 agonists, the continuous spinal infusion of each
class of agent has been shown to result in a progressive decline in
effect over several days (Russell et al., 1987
; Loomis
et al., 1988
; Stevens et al., 1988
; Stevens and
Yaksh, 1989a
,b
; Sosnowski and Yaksh, 1990
; Stevens and Yaksh, 1992
;
Takano and Yaksh, 1993
). Systematic investigations have shown that this
decline occurs in the face of continued steady-state drug exposure,
does not depend on handling and shows minimal cross-tolerance between
mu and alpha-2 agonists (Lameh et al.,
1992
). The use of a chronic infusion model has technical advantages
over either systemic or intrathecal bolus delivery. First, chronic
infusion produces a steady state of drug which avoids the peaks and
valleys of drug exposure inherent in bolus delivery. Such daily troughs
will lead to intermittent withdrawal in the intervening period before
each injection, a factor that may contribute to the reported
hyperalgesia observed during the course of tolerance induction in other
models (Mao et al., 1994
). Second, continuous infusion
models preclude the need to repeatedly handle the animals, which
creates a classical conditioning model (MacRae et al.,
1987
).
Although the mechanism of tolerance development remains controversial,
several studies have shown that the co-delivery of NMDA antagonists can
attenuate the magnitude of opioid tolerance when the agents are
delivered systemically by pellets or bolus injection (Trujillo and
Akil, 1991
; Marek et al., 1991a
,b
; Ben Eliyahu et
al., 1992
) and intrathecally by bolus delivery (Kest et
al., 1993
; Mao et al., 1994
). In recent work we used a
well-defined spinal continuous infusion paradigm to demonstrate that
co-infusion of MK with morphine over 7 days diminishes the daily
reduction in effect otherwise observed with chronic administration, and also prevents the right shift in morphine bolus dose-response curves 1 day after termination of infusion (Dunbar and Yaksh, 1996
). The
mechanism of this effect of NMDA antagonism is uncertain. It has been
hypothesized, however, that opiates may inhibit adenylate cyclase
activity through their effect on a Gi protein. This serves to activate
protein kinase C which in turn acts to phosphorylate the Gi protein and
suppress its ability to inhibit adenylate cyclase. NMDA receptor
occupancy has been shown to induce protein kinase C translocation
during opiate exposure (Mao et al., 1994
). To the degree
that this is a viable hypothesis, it suggests that NMDA blockade may
additionally serve to alter the development of tolerance to other
agonists that act via Gi-coupled receptors. Given the
apparent similarities between the mechanism whereby spinal
alpha-2 receptors act to alter nociceptive transmission (Yaksh 1993
; Yaksh et al., 1993
), it seems reasonable to
hypothesize that spinal NMDA blockade also prevents the loss of effect
observed with chronic spinal delivery of an alpha-2 agonist.
The specific aims of this study were: 1) to assess the effects of NMDA receptor antagonism on an intrathecal model of continuous spinal alpha-2 agonist exposure with use of ST; 2) to quantify the magnitude of the development of tolerance induced by chronic ST exposure by assessing the degree of shift in the bolus dose-response curves of each group after a week of infusion ("probe dose-response curve"); 3) to assess the effect of an acute bolus of MK in ST-tolerant rats; and 4) to assess the effect of MK on ST tolerance 1 week after its discontinuation.
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Methods |
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Animals.
Approval for this study was obtained from the
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of
California San Diego. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (350
400 g) were each
implanted with an intrathecal catheter attached to a subcutaneous
osmotic pump filled with saline or drug(s), as described below, and
were housed thereafter in individual standard cages at room temperature on a 12-h light/12-h dark cycle (lights on 7:00 A.M.).
Testing was performed during the light cycle at 12:00 P.M.
Animals had free access to food and water. Rats were randomly assigned
to one or the other group. All rats were sacrificed by overdose of barbiturate on the last day of testing, which was day 8 in most cases,
or on day 14 when rats were redosed 1 week after cessation of infusion.
Preparation of the catheter with infusion pump and
implantation.
The preparation of the catheter has been described
previously (Yaksh and Rudy, 1976
). A 16-cm length of PE-10 tubing was
connected to a 2-cm length of PE-60 tubing by heat with a hot-air jet.
A 1-cm piece of silastic tubing previously soaked in chloroform to
increase its internal diameter was then passed over both ends of the
PE-10 tubing to form a loop at a distance of 3 cm from the end of the
PE-10 tubing fused to the PE-60. The long end of the catheter was
stretched to reduce diameter, soaked in alcohol (70%) overnight and
cut to a length of 9 cm from the silastic tubing. Alzet osmotic
minipumps (model 2001 delivering 1 µl/h; Alza, Palo Alta, CA) were
filled with drug(s) or saline and attached to the saline-flushed
catheter. This pump is designed to deliver a constant infusion of 1 µl/h for 7 days after an initial activation period of 4 h in the
animal. The catheter and pump are then implanted between 9 A.M. and 12 P.M., according to the procedure
originally described for chronic catheterization of the rat spinal cord
(Yaksh and Harty, 1988
), with the additional modification of the
subcutaneous osmotic pump. Animals were anesthetized with halothane and
placed in a stereotaxic head holder. A midline incision was made to
expose the atlanto-occipital membrane. The membrane was pierced, and the PE-10 end of the catheter passed intrathecally to a distance of 8.5 cm (caudal to the level of the thoracolumbar junction). The pump was
then attached to the PE-60 end of the catheter and implanted
subcutaneously in a pouch to lie just behind one or the other shoulder.
The loop end of the catheter was passed rostrally to exit
percutaneously on the top of the skull. This PE-10 loop was cut at the
end of the 7-day infusion period to discontinue infusion and used to
administer external doses of drug. The wound was then sutured,
including a loose ligature at the base of the loop to prevent it from
moving. Animals fully recovered 15 to 30 min after implantation. Those
rats showing any signs of motor impairment were sacrificed with an
overdose of barbiturate.
Drugs and injection.
The following drugs were used for
continuous spinal infusion: ST, an alpha-2 agonist
(Boehringer, Ingelheim, Germany) and MK, an NMDA receptor antagonist
(Research Biochemicals International, Natick, MA). Drugs were dissolved
in sterile normal saline. Drug doses, calculated as the free base, were
expressed in nanomoles per hour for the infusion concentrations, or
nanomoles per rat for the postinfusion dose-response studies. ST
infusion concentration was 40 nmol/µl/h in all animals receiving ST,
because this dose was found in pilot studies to have yielded a
near-maximal increase in hot-plate latency on day 1 after implant
without any attendant motor effects. The MK dose of 10 nmol/µl/h was
found to have the maximal effect in attenuating tolerance in pilot
studies with the least number of animals expressing side effects. In
preliminary studies (Dunbar and Yaksh, 1996
), we observed that MK doses
exceeding 15 nmol/µl/h resulted in weight loss and motor weakness,
whereas doses of 1 nmol/µl/h or less had little effect on tolerance.
Experimental paradigms. Animals were first tested on the hot plate and then implanted with an i.t. catheter. Testing was carried out daily on the hot plate between the hours of 10 A.M. and 12 P.M. from day 0, the day of implantation, to day 7 (at the end of 7 days of infusion). The groups examined were: MK (10 nmol/µl/h) + ST (40 nmol/µl/h); MK (10 nmol/µl/h); ST (40 (nmol/µl/h); and normal saline (1 µl/h). A group infused with ST alone was given an i.t. bolus dose of 10 nmol MK in 10 µl of saline on day 7 to determine whether i.t. MK would restore ST sensitivity when administered as an acute bolus in ST-tolerant rats.
On day 7, after testing on the hot plate at approximately 12 P.M., the external loop of catheter was cut, and the i.t. part of the catheter flushed with 10 µl of normal saline. On day 8 (24 h after stopping the infusion and flushing the catheter), a single probe dose of i.t. ST in 10 µl of saline was administered. Based on preliminary studies, rats were given one of the following i.t. probe doses of ST: those infused with saline were given either 4, 12 or 40 nmol of ST; those infused with ST alone were given 40, 120 or 400 nmol of ST; those infused with MK + ST were given either 12, 40 or 120 nmol of ST; those infused with MK alone were given either 0.4, 4 or 12 nmol of ST. Hot-plate latencies were measured at 0, 15, 30, 60 and 120 min. This assignment was continued until at least four or more rats in each group were obtained for each i.t. probe dose, which generated a dose-response curve for each group. Each rat was used only once. Finally, four to eight rats from each of these groups were re-tested 1 week later, after cessation of infusion, to assess their response to an i.t. probe dose of 40 nmol of ST on the hot plate. Hot-plate latencies were measured at 0, 15, 30, 60, 120 and 180 min.Antinociceptive testing and data analysis. The effects of i.t. infusions were assessed by the hot-plate test. The hot-plate apparatus was a water bath, the stainless steel surface of which was the test surface. This surface was maintained at a temperature of 52.5 ± 0.5°C by a proportional feedback controller. The endpoint for the hot plate was taken to be the licking of one the hind paws. In a small percentage of the animals, the rat did not show licking behavior but reliably displayed signs of agitation as evidenced by rapid stomping of the foot, jumping and/or strong vocalization. In this event, the activity was taken to be the endpoint and that latency assigned. Post hoc inspection of the data revealed that this occurred in less than 5% of the cases and was distributed across treatment groups. A cutoff time of 60 sec was used to avoid tissue damage. Hot-plate data were expressed either as mean latencies for each group or as %MPE. %MPE was calculated as follows:
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Statistics.
Analysis of the dose-response curves and
statistics were obtained with computer software programs (Abacus
Concepts, Stat-View, Abacus Concepts, Inc., Berkeley, CA, 1992). Where
applicable, data from hot-plate testing (absolute latencies or
calculated %MPE) were analyzed by one- or two-way ANOVA to detect
differences between groups. When differences were found, these findings
were subjected to a Scheffe F-test (significant at 95%). Single points of comparison within the same group were made with a standard paired
t test where applicable. Analysis of the dose-response curves by linear regression analysis was obtained with pharmacological software programs (Tallarida and Murray, 1981
), by which calculation of
the ED50 (95% confidence intervals) and tests for relative potency were performed. The tolerance ratio (the ratio of
ED50 in drug-infused animals to ED50 of
saline-infused animals) and 95% confidence intervals were calculated.
Differences yielding critical values corresponding to P < .05 were considered statistically significant. Differences of P > .05 were considered not significant.
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Results |
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Time Course of Effect of Spinal Infusions on Daily Hot-Plate Escape Latencies
Chronic infusion of saline or agents had no observable effect on
motor function. All rats entered into the study after implantation survived for the interval of the infusion without motor deficits. The
daily hot-plate response latencies for all groups are presented in
figure 1.
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Saline-infused rats. There were no significant differences between latencies on day 0, 1 and 7 (day 0: 14 ± 1 sec vs. day 1: 14 ± 1 sec vs. day 7: 14 ± 1 sec, n = 12) (fig. 1), demonstrating no significant effect of implantation, infusion of the saline vehicle or daily testing.
MK-infused rats. There were no significant differences between latencies in MK-infused rats (n = 12) and saline-infused rats. There were no significant differences between latencies of MK-infused rats on day 0 compared with those on day 7 (day 0: 13 ± 1 vs. day 7: 15 ± 1 sec) (fig. 1). Thus there was no significant effect of intrathecal infusion of MK alone on daily hot-plate testing.
ST-infused rats. There were no significant differences between base-line latencies in ST-infused rats (n = 17) and saline-infused rats (13 ± 1 sec vs. 14 ± 1 sec). All ST-infused rats showed a near-maximal increase in latencies on day 1 over base line (51 ± 3 sec), returning to base-line values on day 3 (18 ± 2 sec), which was not significantly different from saline-infused rats also on day 3 (15 ± 1 sec) (fig. 1). There were no significant differences between saline- and ST-infused rats on any day from day 3 until the end of the infusion.
ST + MK co-infused rats. Base-line latencies in ST + MK-infused rats (13 ± 1 sec, n = 12) were not significantly different from saline-infused rats. They showed a similar increase in latencies on day 1 (48 ± 4 sec, n = 12) that were not significantly different from ST-infused rats on the same day. Latencies in ST + MK-infused rats remained significantly elevated over saline- and MK-infused rats from day 1 until day 7 (P < .05, ANOVA, Scheffe). These latencies were also significantly elevated over those of rats infused with ST alone from day 3 to day 7 (P < .05, ANOVA, Scheffe) (fig. 1). However, there was a significant decrease in latencies during the infusion period, so that latencies on day 7 were significantly less than those on day 3 (day 3: 29 ± 3 vs. day 7: 19 ± 2 sec, P < .05, paired t test).
Assessment of withdrawal on day 8.
On day 8 (24 h after
infusions had finished), latencies of ST-infused rats were
significantly lower than those on day 7 (8.9 ± 0.3 sec
vs. 13 ± 1 sec, n = 17, P < .05, paired t test), and significantly lower than those of ST + MK-infused rats (15 ± 1 sec, n = 12) and rats
infused with saline (14 ± 1 sec, n = 12) or MK
alone (15 ± 1 sec, n = 12) (P < .05, Scheffe, ANOVA) (fig. 2). Thus, increased thermal
sensitivity, which was seen in ST-infused rats after discontinuation of
infusion, was not seen in rats co-infused with ST and MK.
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Effect of acute administration of MK in ST-tolerant rats.
Rats
infused with ST alone or saline, and given an i.t. bolus of MK (10 nmol) at 12:00 P.M. on day 7, the last day of the infusion
(n = 4), showed no significant increase in latencies over base line, demonstrating a lack of acute effect of MK in restoring
sensitivity to ST (fig. 3).
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Probe Dose-Response Curves
After severing the pump-catheter connection on day 7 and flushing the catheter with 10 µl of saline, 24 h was allowed to elapse before each rat was given one of several doses of i.t. ST to generate the probe dose-response curves on day 8.
Saline- and MK-infused rats.
In saline-infused rats, 24 h
after terminating infusion, bolus doses of i.t. ST revealed a monotonic
dose-response (%MPE) curve (ED50 = 12 nmol). In MK-infused
rats, the i.t. ST probe dose-response (%MPE) curve showed a
significant 6-fold parallel left shift as compared with saline-infused
rats (ED50 = 2.1 nmol) (P < .05). The
ED50 as measured by %AUC was also significantly decreased
by 4-fold, which showed an increased duration of effect as well as peak
effect (fig. 4, table 1).
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ST-infused rats. The i.t. ST probe dose-response (%MPE) curve in ST-infused rats displayed a significant right shift, such that the ED50 (121 nmol) was significantly increased by a factor of 10 as compared with saline-infused rats (P < .05). The ED50 as measured by %AUC was also significantly increased by a factor of 20 as compared with saline-infused rats (fig. 4, table 1) (P < .05). This shows that in ST-tolerant animals, the peak as well as the duration of effect of a probe dose of ST was substantially decreased.
ST + MK-infused rats. ST + MK-infused rats showed a significant decrease in the expected right shift in the dose-response (%MPE) curve such that the ED50 (34 nmol) was significantly increased by a factor of 3 as compared with saline-infused rats, and significantly decreased by a factor of 3 when compared with ST-infused rats (P < .05). The ED50 as measured by %AUC was significantly increased by a factor of 6 as compared with saline-infused rats, and significantly decreased by a factor of 3 as compared with ST-infused rats (P < .05) (fig. 4, table 1). This indicates that in ST + MK-infused rats, sensitivity to peak effect and duration of ST was significantly increased compared with rats infused with ST alone.
Response to single i.t. probe dose of ST 7 days after cessation of infusion. Five or more rats in each group infused with saline, ST, ST + MK and MK alone were given a 40 nmol i.t. probe dose of ST 7 days after discontinuation of infusion (on day 15). ST- and ST + MK-infused rats showed a significant and abrupt decrease in duration of effect as compared with saline and MK infusion groups (latencies at 120 min: ST, 12 ± 1; ST + MK, 13 ± 2 vs. saline, 32 ± 8; MK, 32 ± 6 sec, P < .05, ANOVA, Scheffe). This occurred despite all groups having achieved the same peak effect (%MPE) at 60 min. There was no significant difference between groups infused with ST (ST or ST + MK), however; thus prior administration of MK had no effect on attenuation of tolerance in either of the two ST-infused groups when tolerance was reassessed at this time.
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Discussion |
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Spinal analgesic tolerance.
Spinal delivery of mu,
delta, kappa and alpha-2
adrenoreceptor agonists produces a powerful antinociceptive effect. The
spinal effect of each receptor is believed to reflect a common
regulatory organization: 1) a presynaptic action on small primary
afferents blocking transmitter release and 2) a postsynaptic
hyperpolarization mediated by increased potassium conductance through
Gi protein coupling (Yaksh, et al., 1993
; Yaksh, 1993
).
Continued agonist receptor occupancy uniformly results in a
concentration-dependent increase in nociceptive response latency,
followed over several days by a reliable decline in this effect, as
well as a right shift in agonist dose response, the magnitude of which
is proportional to the concentration of the tolerogen and inversely
proportional to the efficacy of the agonist (Stevens and Yaksh, 1989a
;
Takano and Yaksh, 1993
). This decline is believed to reflect a
pharmacological effect of continued drug-receptor interaction and
occurs without animal handling (Stevens et al., 1988
;
Stevens and Yaksh, 1989a
,b
, 1992
; Sosnowski and Yaksh, 1990
). The
mechanism for this reduction of effect is controversial, but
functionally resembles a down-regulation of receptor number or a loss
of second messenger coupling. Although no specific studies exist for
the spinal alpha-2 receptor, binding studies have shown only
a modest and inconsistent reduction in opioid binding with chronic
opiate exposure (Nishino et al., 1990
; Bhargava and Gulati,
1990
; Wong et al., 1992
; Gourarderes et al., 1993
), and this has led to a focus on changes in second messenger coupling. There are similarities in the second messenger systems of
opioid and alpha-2 agonists (both suppress adenyl cyclase
and act via G protein coupling); however, minimal
cross-tolerance of one to the other is seen after chronic
administration (Lameh et al., 1992
), which suggests
fundamental differences in cellular function during tolerance
development.
Spinal NMDA receptor antagonism and spinal alpha-2
tolerance.
NMDA receptor antagonism by both noncompetitive (MK) or
competitive [LY274614,
(+)-6-phosphonomethyl-decahydroisoquinolin-3-carboxylicacid] antagonists can attenuate tolerance to opioids in both systemic and intrathecal models of drug delivery (Trujillo and Akil, 1991
; Marek
et al., 1991a
,b
; Ben Eliyahyu et al., 1992; Mao
et al., 1994
; Kest et al., 1993
; Dunbar and
Yaksh, 1996
). These studies have been largely carried out with the
mu opioid agonist morphine, and it seems plausible that this
effect should occur also with agents believed to act through similar
cellular mechanisms. In the present work, co-infusion of intrathecal MK
for 1 week along with exposure to the alpha-2 agonist ST
partially prevented the expected loss of antinociception produced by
chronic alpha-2 agonist administration and attenuated the
expected right shift in the probe dose-response curve to ST. This
reduction in right shift did not appear to be secondary to a direct
effect of intrathecal MK, because 1) MK had no effect on hot-plate
latencies either acutely or chronically administered in this or in
previous studies with this model (Dunbar and Yaksh, 1996
); 2) there
were no significant differences in latencies on the first day of
infusion (day 1) between ST- and ST + MK-infused rats; 3) acute
delivery of MK after 7 days of ST exposure did not alter base-line
latencies; and 4) in the probe dose studies, despite termination of
infusions for 24 h (which we believe permitted clearance of any
infused agent), ST + MK- infused rats failed to show the expected right shift observed in animals exposed to ST alone, which indicates that
prior exposure to MK altered responsiveness to the agonist ST in the
absence of MK. Although pharmacokinetic data for elimination of drug
after cessation of infusion were not obtained, previous studies with
higher single-bolus doses have shown an effective half-life of 2 h
(Yaksh et al., 1993
), far greater than the 12 half-lives
that were permitted to pass before testing was carried out on day 8.
Facilitation evoked by chronic spinal NMDA antagonism.
An
important observation was that exposure to the NMDA antagonist alone
produced a significant left shift in the ST probe dose-response curve.
This was not caused by alteration in base-line latencies because these
were unchanged by chronic MK exposure. Additionally, there was no
effect seen with acutely delivered MK in ST-tolerant rats; so if any
residual effect of MK had persisted 24 h after cessation of
infusion, it would be unlikely to account for this observation. Thus,
although isobolographic analysis of drug combination was not performed,
we do not think that this effect reflects a simple synergic interaction
between receptor systems. Moreover, previous studies have failed to
show a synergistic action of opioids and NMDA receptor antagonists
during chronic exposure (Marek et al., 1991a
,b
; Trujillo and
Akil, 1991
). Accordingly, we believe that continued NMDA receptor
antagonism produces a change in system function which leads to a
sensitization of the system. These effects were similarly observed with
spinal morphine (Dunbar and Yaksh, 1996
). To our knowledge this
facilitation with chronic alpha-2 agonist exposure has not
been reported previously.
Hypothesized mechanisms of interaction of NMDA antagonism and ST
activity.
One possible mechanism proposed for tolerance to ST and
morphine is the down-regulation of receptor number. NMDA receptor antagonism does not alter the affinity or density of mu,
delta, kappa-1 or kappa-3 opioid
binding sites in rat brain homogenates (Tiseo et al., 1994
).
Thus it appears unlikely that this mechanism accounts for the ability
of MK to attenuate tolerance to ST. With regard to intracellular
coupling, alpha-2 adrenoceptor agonists inhibit adenylate
cyclase activity via a G inhibitory GTP membrane-bound protein decrease in cAMP formation. This activates protein kinase C,
which phosphorylates the G inhibitory protein, and suppresses its
ability to inhibit adenylate cyclase, which leads to a compensatory increase in adenylate cyclase activity. Protein kinase C translocation by NMDA receptor activation during opioid exposure has been shown to
occur (Etoh et al., 1992
), and spinal opiate tolerance has been blocked by GMI ganglioside which prevents this translocation (Mayer et al., 1993
). Such increases in protein kinase C
activity could modulate K channel activity (Alkon and Naito, 1987
) or
reduce the Mg++ block of the NMDA receptor (Chen and Huang,
1992
). The opioid [D-Ala2,N-Me-Phe4,Gly-ol]enkephalin,
via protein kinase C activation, diminishes the inhibitory
effects of the mu agonist on Ca++ channel
opening (Rane and Dunlap, 1986
; Ewald et al., 1988
, 1989
). Thus chronic NMDA receptor antagonism may interfere with this process
and, as in the case of opioids, may also attenuate alpha-2 agonist tolerance in the same manner.
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Alpha-2 withdrawal evoked hyperalgesia.
After
discontinuation of ST infusion, a significant reduction in thermal
escape latency was noted in ST-infused rats. Similar results were noted
in opioid-infused rats (Dunbar and Yaksh, 1996
). This hyperalgesia is
believed to reflect a withdrawal sign and was not observed in rats
infused with ST + MK, perhaps reflecting the ability of MK to prevent
the evolution of a dependent state or to prevent the expression of this
state during abstinence, as has been seen in spinal morphine-tolerant
rats (Dunbar and Yaksh, 1996
). The origin of this hyperalgesia is
uncertain; but naloxone delivery in spinal morphine-tolerant rats will
evoke release of spinal glutamate (Ibuki et al., 1995
).
Intrathecal glutamate receptor agonists also produce thermal
hyperalgesia (Malmberg and Yaksh, 1992
). Accordingly, we now speculate
that withdrawal from chronic spinal alpha-2 exposure may
result in a hyperalgesic state because of the rebound release of spinal glutamate and that this process may be blocked by NMDA receptor blockade.
Conclusion. This study shows that chronic, but not acute, antagonism of the spinal NMDA receptor with spinal MK attenuates the development of spinal tolerance to the alpha-2 adrenoreceptor agonist ST, and importantly produces sensitization to ST in the nontolerant state. MK also was found to prevent withdrawal hyperalgesia normally observed in ST-tolerant rats. The observation of sensitization by NMDA antagonism alone raises the possibility that the attenuation of the agonist-receptor-mediated effects associated with chronic exposure may have several mechanisms. Thus NMDA receptor antagonism may not prevent the development of tolerance itself but may alter the expression of tolerance by inducing sensitivity via other nonspecific alterations in cellular function.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication February 12, 1997.
Received for publication July 30, 1996.
1 This work was supported by DA02110 (T.L.Y.) and by Anesthesiology Training grant NIH T32NS07329 (S.D.).
Send reprint requests to: Stuart Dunbar, MB. Research Fellow, Department of Anesthesiology 0818, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, LaJolla, CA 92103.
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Abbreviations |
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MK, (+)MK801 (dizocilpine hydrogen maleate); ST, ST-91 HCL (2-[2,6-diethylphenylaminol]-2-imidazoline; intrathecal, i.t; NMDA, N-methyl-D-aspartate; %MPE, percentage maximum effect; %AUC, percentage area under the dose-response curve; ANOVA, analysis of variance; GTP, guanine triphosphate.
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References |
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2-adrenergic agonists as analgesics. In Baillière's Clinical Anaesthesiology, ed. by A. R. Aitkenhead,
G. Benad,
B. R. Brown,
M. J. Cousins,
J. G. Jones,
L. Strunin,
D. Thomson and
H. Van Aken, pp. 597-614, Baillière Tindall, London, 1993.
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