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Vol. 285, Issue 2, 700-706, May 1998
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Unit of Pharmacology, University School of Medicine (M.V.M., M.L.L.), Murcia, Spain and Equip of Neurobiology and Experimental Physiology (M.C.-C., A.B.), INSERM U.308, Nancy, France
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Abstract |
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The modification in the activity of noradrenergic neurons projecting to the hypothalamus and the pituitary-adrenal response during morphine withdrawal as well its correlation with alterations in corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and vasopressin (AVP) content in different brain areas was analyzed. Male rats were implanted with placebo (naïve) or morphine (tolerant/dependent) pellets for 7 days. On day 8, groups of rats received an acute injection of saline s.c. (control) or naloxone (1 mg/kg s.c.) and were decapitated 30 min later. After administration of naloxone to tolerant rats (withdrawal) we found a striking parallelism between an enhanced activity of hypothalamic noradrenergic neurons and an increased corticosterone secretion; concomitantly, the CRF but not the AVP content in the paraventricular nucleus was decreased, which might reflect an increased release of the peptide. During withdrawal, CRF content also was decreased in the arcuate nucleus, whereas no changes were found in the median eminence, dorsomedial, ventromedial nuclei or in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. AVP content levels were not modified in arcuate nucleus, supraoptic or in the suprachiasmatic nuclei. Present data suggest that a hypothalamic noradrenergic hypersecretion may be involved in a selectively increased activity of CRF neurons in the paraventricular nucleus and arcuate nucleus and then in the enhanced release of corticosterone induced by morphine withdrawal. However, we did not find any correlation between opioid withdrawal-induced alterations in the pituitary-adrenal axis and AVP modifications.
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Introduction |
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Although
endogenous opioid peptides are thought to be involved in
modulating the HPA axis, the effects of opioids on the axis have
been a matter of controversy (Pechnick, 1993
). In rats, acute administration of morphine and related opioid agonists produces an
increased HPA activity (Ignar and Kuhn, 1990
; Martínez et al., 1990
; Alcaraz et al., 1993
), which may suggest an
involvement of CRF in opioid-induced neuroendocrine responses (Wang
et al., 1996
). Chronic exposure to these agonist results in
the development of tolerance to and dependence on opioid-induced
endocrine secretion (Martínez et al., 1990
;
Gonzálvez et al., 1991
; Vargas et al., 1997
).
Opioid withdrawal produces complex behavioral, autonomic and
endocrine alterations in rats (Maldonado et al., 1992
),
including an activation of the HPA axis activity (Martínez
et al., 1990
; Gonzálvez et al., 1994
;
Vargas et al., 1997
), possibly because of the
overproduction of CRF. Although implication of noradrenergic neurotransmission in the locus ceruleus has been suggested for explaining morphine withdrawal (Nestler, 1992
), and increased activity
of noradrenergic cells of the locus ceruleus correlates with withdrawal
behavior, the exact neurobiological mechanisms of opioid withdrawal
have yet to be determined. There are a few reports concerning the
characteristics of functional disturbances of hypothalamic
noradrenergic neurotransmission during opioid tolerance/dependence.
Previously, we have observed opposite effects of acute and chronic
morphine exposure on hypothalamic NA content and turnover
(Martínez-Piñero et al., 1994
; Vargas et
al., 1997
), which suggests the involvement of hypothalamic
noradrenergic terminals in the development of opioid
tolerance/dependence.
Corticotropin-releasing factor produced in the parvocellular
division of the PVN of the hypothalamus plays a major role in the
regulation of ACTH release from anterior pituitary (Vale et al., 1981
). Parvocellular cells, under a variety of circumstances, also synthesize AVP, which also has corticotropic releasing activity (Franci et al., 1993
). Considerable evidence suggests that,
in addition to its role in ACTH secretion, CRF plays a key role in mediating behavioral, autonomic and endocrine responses to stress, thus
raising the possibility that the central CRF system may act to
integrate multimodal components of the organic response to different
types of stress. On the other hand, there is pharmacological evidence
that NA modulates the synthesis and release of hypothalamic CRF
(Widmaier et al., 1989
; Itoi et al., 1994
), and
it has been proposed that opioids can affect HPA axis activity
indirectly by altering noradrenergic neurotransmission (Suemaru
et al., 1989
; Martínez-Piñero et
al., 1994
).
Because the hypothalamus is a key modulator and integrator of numerous
behavioral and physiological functions, it is important to determine
the possible changes in CRF/AVP within different hypothalamic nuclei
during opioid withdrawal. To elucidate the link between CRF, AVP and
hypothalamic NA turnover during opioid withdrawal, we examined the
changes of CRF/AVP levels and noradrenergic activity in the
hypothalamus of rats made dependent on morphine and after
naloxone-precipitated withdrawal. For that, CRF and AVP content were
measured in different nuclei and regions (including the PVN, median
eminence, ventromedial, dorsomedial, supraoptic, suprachiasmatic,
arcuate nuclei and the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis). These
structures were chosen on the basis of an attempt to establish the
areas related to stress response that are modified during opioid
withdrawal, which might aid in defining neural circuitry mediating
long-term adaptation to opioids. Concomitantly, in parallel experiments, the hypothalamic NA and MHPG (its cerebral metabolite) levels and plasma corticosterone concentration (as a marker of HPA axis
activity; Yokoe et al., 1988
) were evaluated.
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Methods |
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Animals. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (200-210 g at the beginning of treatment) were housed four to five per cage under a 12-h light/dark cycle in a room with controlled temperature (22 ± 1°C), humidity (50 ± 10%) and food and water available ad libitum.
Experimental procedure.
On the basis of previous studies
(Gonzálvez et al., 1994
; Vargas et al.,
1997
), rats were rendered tolerant/dependent on morphine by s.c.
implantation of morphine base pellets (75 mg), one on day 0, two on day
2 and three on day 4, under light ether anesthesia. This treatment
results in a profound state of tolerance and dependence. Control
animals were implanted with placebo pellets containing lactose at the
same time schedule. On day 7 animals were injected with saline s.c. or
naloxone HCl (1 mg/kg s.c.) and were observed for opioid withdrawal
behavior (wet-dog shakes, teeth chattering, salivation, lacrimation,
locomotion, rhinorrhea and ptosis) for 30 min. At the end of this
period animals were sacrificed, and analytical studies were conducted.
There were four experimental groups: 1) chronic placebo
(naïve)-acute saline s.c.; 2) chronic placebo-acute naloxone
s.c.; 3) chronic morphine-acute saline s.c.; 4) chronic morphine-acute
naloxone s.c.
Corticosterone assays.
At the end of the treatment, rats
were sacrificed by decapitation between 10:00 and 11:00
A.M. to avoid circadian variations in plasma levels of
corticosterone or in the hypothalamic content and turnover of NA. Trunk
blood was collected into ice-cooled tubes containing 5%
ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid and then was centrifuged (2500 rpm;
4°C; 15 min). Plasma was separated and stored at
30°C until
assayed for corticosterone. Plasma levels of corticosterone were
estimated with a commercially available kit for rats
(125I-corticosterone radioimmunoassay, ICN
Biomedicals, Costa Mesa, CA). The sensitivity of the assay was 0.40 ng/ml. The inter- and intra-assay coefficients of variation were 6.5 and 4.4%, respectively. The antibody cross-reacted 100% with
corticosterone and <0.5% with other steroids.
Estimation of hypothalamic NA and MHPG.
After decapitation,
the brains were removed, fresh-frozen and stored at
80°C until use.
For estimation of NA and MHPG, the hypothalamic tissue (delineated by
the optic chiasma rostrally, the anterior margin of the mamillary
bodies caudally and the lateral hypothalamic sulci) was excised.
Dorsally, the cut was performed at about 3 mm from the ventral surface.
NA and its metabolite in the CNS (MHPG) were determined by HPLC with
electrochemical detection. Each tissue was weighed, placed in a
dry-cooled polypropylene vial and homogenized with a Polytron-type
homogenizer (setting 5 for 30 s) in 1 ml perchloric acid (0.1 M).
The homogenates were then centrifuged (15,000 rpm; 4°C; 15 min) and
the supernatants taken for analysis. Two aliquots of the supernatant
from the same tissue sample were used, one for analysis of NA and the
other for analysis of MHPG. The aliquot for NA analysis was filtered through 0.22 µm GV (Millipore, Bedford, MA) and 10 µl of each sample was injected into a 5-µm C18
reverse-phase column (Waters, Milford, MA). Electrochemical detection
was accomplished with a glassy carbon electrode set at a potential of
+0.65 V vs. the Ag/AgCl reference electrode (Waters). The
mobile phase consisted of a 95:5 (v/v) mixture of water and methanol
with sodium acetate (50 mM), citric acid (20 mM), 1-octyl-sodium
sulfonate (3.75 mM), di-n-butylamine (1 mM) and
ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (0.135 mM), adjusted to pH 4.3. The
flow rate was 0.9 ml/min and chromatographic data were analyzed with a
Millennium 2010 Chromatography Manager (Millipore) equipment. Because
most of MHPG is present in a sulfate conjugate form in the rat CNS, the
method for the determination of total MHPG in the hypothalamus is based
on the acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of MHPG-sulfate (Artigas et
al., 1986
; Lookingland et al., 1991
). The aliquots for
MHPG analysis were kept in polypropylene, screw-capped tubes for 5 min
in a water bath at 100°C. The tubes were then cooled on ice and
centrifuged (4000 rpm; 4°C; 10 min). The supernatant was filtered
through a 0.22 GV and hydrolyzed samples were injected (50 µl) into
the HPLC equipment. The eluent for MHPG determination was as described
above, but without 1-octyl-sodium sulfonate. Under these conditions,
MHPG eluted at 4.80 to 5 min. NA and MHPG were quantified by reference
to calibration curves run at the beginning and the end of each series
of assays. The hypothalamic content of NA and MHPG was expressed as
nanograms per gram wet weight of tissue.
CRF and AVP assays.
After decapitation the brains were
removed quickly, frozen on dry ice and stored at
80°C. Serial
sections of 300 µm were cut, and different anatomical structures were
micropunched: PVN, VMN, DMN, AN, SON, SCN, BNST and the ME. Bilateral
tissue samples pooled from two rats were placed in 100 µl of cold 0.2 N HCl in microfuge tubes (500 µl capacity) and were stored at
70°C until assayed.
40°C and the
lyophilized just before the RIA. The amounts of CRF in the tissue
extracts were determined with an antibody raised in rabbit against rat
CRF (Neosystem, Strasbourg, France). It reacted with human or rat
(Tyr)-CRF but did not show cross-reactivity (<0.0001%) with AVP,
oxytocin, thyrotropin-releasing or luteinizing hormone-releasing
hormones or substance P. Just before RIA, the lyophilized samples were
reconstituted in RIA buffer (0.05 M tris-HCl, 1% bovine serum albumin,
0.1% Triton X-100, pH 7.5) and incubated at 4°C for 48 h with
the antibody at a dilution of 1:10.000. Then the tracer
(125I-Tyr-rat/human CRF, 2200 Ci/mM, NEN, Boston,
MA) was added. Horse serum (100 µl) was added before the separation
of bound peptide with charcoal-dextran mixture. After centrifugation
(4000 rpm for 30 min at 4°C), the sample radioactivity was measured
in the supernatant with a gamma counter coupled to a microcomputer (MDA 312 system, Kontron). The sensitivity of assay was 10 pg/tube. The
intra- and interassay coefficients of variation were 6.5% and 9%,
respectively.
The amounts of AVP in the tissue extracts were determined with an
antibody raised against AVP (P1, dilution 1:25.000 final) in rabbit.
The tracer was the 125I-labeled AVP (NEN, 2200 Ci/mmol). The antibody cross-reactivity with Arg-AVP and Lys-AVP was
100%, 1.25% with vasotocin, 0.07% with pressinoic acid and 0.002%
with oxytocin. Assay sensitivity was 1 pg/tube; intra-and interassay
variations were 1.4% and 12%, respectively.
Statistical analysis. The data are expressed as means ± S.E.M. Plasma levels of corticosterone and cerebral concentration of CRF, AVP, NA, MHPG and the MHPG/NA ratio were analyzed by a computer program with analysis of variance followed by the Newman-Keuls test. Significance level was taken as P < .05.
Drugs and chemicals. Pellets of morphine base (Alcaliber Labs., Madrid, Spain) or lactose were prepared by the Department of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutic Technology (School of Pharmacy, Granada, Spain); NA bitartrate, MHPG hemipiperazinium salt (used as HPLC standards) and naloxone HCl, were purchased from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). Naloxone HCl was prepared fresh every day, dissolved in sterile 0.9% NaCl (saline).
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Results |
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Characteristic abnormal behavioral signs (escape behavior, wet-dog shakes, teeth chattering, locomotion, salivation, lacrimation, rhinorrhea and ptosis), showing the expression of withdrawal syndrome, were observed after s.c. injection of naloxone 3 days after the termination of the implantation of morphine pellets for 5 days.
Hypothalamic noradrenergic activity and corticosterone secretion. In control (naïve) rats, injection of naloxone (1 mg/kg s.c.) did not alter hypothalamic NA and its metabolite MHPG concentration (1203 ± 57 ng/g and 147.8 ± 13 ng/g vs. 1158 ± 83 ng/g and 109 ± 37 ng/g, respectively) or NA turnover (as measured by the MHPG/NA ratio; 0.10 ± 0.01 vs. 0.087 ± 0.01) (fig. 1, hatched vs.. open columns). Concomitantly, plasma corticosterone levels were not modified 30 min after naloxone injection to naive rats, as compared with the control group injected with saline (166 ± 13 ng/ml vs. 168 ± 8 ng/ml; fig. 2).
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Effects of morphine tolerance and abstinence on CRF levels. Figure 3 depicts that in rats receiving placebo pellet there was no change in the CRF content in the PVN 30 min after naloxone injection (1.0 ± 0.08 ng/mg) compared with the control group injected with saline (0.88 ± 0.05 ng/mg). However, the morphine pellet implantation and subsequent naloxone injection (withdrawal) produced a decrease in CRF content (0.50 ± 0.01 ng/mg) compared with morphine-pelleted rats injected with saline (0.70 ± 0.04 ng/mg; P < .01) and with naive rats injected with naloxone (P < .001).
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Effects of morphine tolerance and abstinence on AVP levels. Figure 4 depicts AVP levels in the PVN and ME for placebo- or morphine-pelleted rats injected acutely with saline or naloxone. Acute injection of naloxone to naive rats did not modify the AVP content in the PVN (32 ± 3 ng/mg vs. 30 ± 2 ng/mg). Similarly, injection of naloxone to morphine-pelleted rats induced no changes in the AVP levels (21 ± 2 ng/mg vs. 28 ± 2 ng/mg). When the content of AVP was measured in the ME, acute administration of naloxone to naive or to tolerant rats produced no changes in the AVP content (naïve: 326 ± 43 ng/mg vs. 445 ± 58 ng/mg; tolerant: 381 ± 49 ng/mg vs. 296 ± 19 ng/mg). Table 2 depicts AVP levels for the AN, SON and SCN. Administration of naloxone to naive rats did not modify significantly the AVP levels in any of those nuclei. In morphine-pelleted rats, a decrease in the AVP content in the AN and in the SON (P < .05) was observed. Naloxone had no effect on the AVP content in morphine-treated rats.
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Discussion |
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The mechanisms underlying the effects of chronic opioid
administration and the way that responses to morphine are organized in
the brain are not well known. Given the substantial innervation of the
PVN by endogenous opioid and noradrenergic inputs, and the proposal
role for catecholamines in opiate abuse (Nestler, 1992
; Self and
Nestler, 1995
), we have investigated the adaptive changes in
noradrenergic neurons projecting to the hypothalamus and the
concomitant modifications in the HPA axis activity as well as in
CRF/AVP content in different hypothalamic nuclei in rats withdrawn from
repeated morphine treatment. The morphine pellet implantation induced a
physical dependence, as shown by naloxone-precipitated abstinence signs
(body shakes, teeth chattering, lacrimation, ptosis and so on).
Consistent with previous reports (Ignar and Kuhn, 1990
;
Martínez et al., 1990
; Gonzálvez et
al., 1994
), we found that chronic morphine treatment also produced neuroendocrine dependence, as shown by the increased corticosterone secretion 30 min after naloxone injection. At present, the possible correlation between these alterations and the changes in CRF and other
ACTH secretagogues has not been well established, such as AVP, or in
the activity of some neurotransmitters, such as NA, which has been
implicated in the control of CRF/AVP neurons at hypothalamic levels.
The results of the present study show that morphine withdrawal produces
a decrease in hypothalamic NA content, an overproduction of the NA
metabolite MHPG and an elevation in the MHPG/NA ratio (an index of NA
turnover, Lookingland et al., 1991
), which indicates an
augmented NA turnover and release. These changes were observed at the
time of reduced CRF content in the PVN and increased corticosterone secretion. Present data indicate clearly that dependence is associated with an increase in noradrenergic activity in the hypothalamus and that
hypothalamic noradrenergic terminals could have a stimulatory effect on
the HPA axis and strongly suggest a critical role of NA in opioid
withdrawal-induced neuroendocrine response. Because changes in NA
turnover were observed at the time of corticosterone secretion, the
present results may indicate that the alteration of HPA axis activity
during withdrawal could be mediated through noradrenergic pathways, as
proposed recently (Vargas et al., 1997
). The mechanisms by
which opioid withdrawal produces activation of HPA axis are not well
established. Simultaneous measurement of hypothalamic NA content and
turnover and corticosterone secretion, as carried out in the present
experiment, indicates that an increase in NA release occurs during
withdrawal concomitantly with corticosterone hypersecretion, which
emphasizes that the opioid withdrawal-stimulated HPA axis can involve
the release of NA.
The opposite effect was observed during tolerance, because an increased
hypothalamic NA content and a reduced MHPG/NA ratio upon chronic
morphine exposure were found, which indicates that the turnover of
hypothalamic NA decreases during chronic opioid administration. In
addition, there was no change in corticosterone secretion. Because
acute morphine administration to naive rats increases hypothalamic MHPG
production, NA turnover and corticosterone secretion (Attila, 1989
;
Gonzálvez et al., 1994
; M. V. Milanés and
M. L. Laorden, unpublished observations), the present results indicate that tolerance develops to the NA turnover and release increasing effects of morphine in the hypothalamus, as well as toward
the HPA axis activity-accelerating effect of the opiate.
Excitation of the HPA axis is driven by central stress circuits (Herman
and Cullinan, 1997
). Notable among these are the brainstem catecholamine-producing neurons, mainly the nucleus of the solitary tract and the locus ceruleus (Cunningham and Sawchenko, 1988
), which
project to the CRF-containing neurons of the PVN. Although there has
been a controversy regarding the role of NA on CRF secretion (Plotsky
et al., 1989
), recent studies indicate that NA stimulates CRF gene expression in the PVN (Itoi et al., 1994
) as well
as CRF and AVP secretion (Raber et al., 1995
; Widmaier
et al., 1989
), both triggering ACTH and corticosterone
release (Itoi et al., 1994
). The present data therefore
further support the notion that hypothalamic noradrenergic terminals
play a pivotal role in the neuroendocrine manifestation of opioid
withdrawal.
CRF produced in the PVN plays a major role in the regulation of the HPA
axis, which is co-regulated by AVP. Because the hypothalamus is a key
modulator of numerous behavioral and physiological functions, it is
important to determine the response of CRF and AVP neurons within
hypothalamic nuclei after administration of opioids. In addition,
increased activity of the brain CRF system is involved in the
pathophysiology of anxiety and stress, which are some of the
psychiatric consequences of chronic opioid abuse and withdrawal. In the
present study we show that administration of naloxone to morphine-dependent rats produces different changes in the CRF and AVP
levels in discrete hypothalamic nuclei as well as in the BNST. These
nuclei contain immunoreactive CRF or AVP, CRF/AVP cell bodies, fibers
or receptors (Owens and Nemeroff, 1991
) as well as opioid-receptor mRNA
and binding (Mansour et al., 1995
). A decrease of CRF
content in the PVN was observed when naloxone was administered to
tolerant rats. The decrease of CRF levels was correlated with the
simultaneous increase that was observed in plasma corticosterone
concentration as well as in noradrenergic release during morphine
withdrawal. Although the measurement of peptide concentration alone can
not distinguish between synthesis, release or degradation, differences
between treatment groups clearly represent alterations in the activity
of neurons in function of the drug or the pretreatment (Owens and
Nemeroff, 1991
) and a decrease in the peptide levels in a certain brain
area usually reflects an increased release and subsequent degradation
of the neuropeptide (Sarnyai et al., 1992
). So,
withdrawal-induced reduction of CRF in the PVN probably was caused by
the release of CRF into the hypothalamic-pituitary portal circulation
then activating the pituitary-adrenal axis. However, we did not observe
any changes in the CRF content in the ME during withdrawal.
The hypothalamic levels of CRF are decreased 15 min after restraint
stress (Moldow et al., 1987
). Both stress and opioid
withdrawal activate the release of stress hormones ACTH and
corticosterone in rats (Ignar and Kuhn, 1990
; Gonzálvez et
al., 1994
). Because opioid withdrawal affects the HPA axis in a
way similar to that of stress, our results might indicate an increased
depletion of CRF during withdrawal. Because peptides must be
synthesized de novo, the synthesis of peptides must match
their release over time. One thus can state that increased synthesis
implies increased release of these peptides. Because opioid withdrawal
increases the HPA activity, a presumed increase of neuronal CRF
synthesis and release in the PVN could contribute to the endocrine
effects of abstinence, although it would be necessary to determine the CRF mRNA expression. In a previous study, Lightman and Young (1988)
showed a marked increase in parvocellular CRF mRNA after acute ether
stress and after naloxone-induced morphine withdrawal. C-fos protein expression is regarded as a marker for neuronal activation and
therefore can be used to map functional pathways in the CNS (Cullinan
et al., 1996
), and naloxone-precipitated morphine withdrawal induces expression of c-fos protein mRNA in the PVN, which
could be mediated through the augmented release of NA into the PVN
(Harbuz et al., 1991
). However, studies showing
transcriptional activation of CRF and AVP genes in the PVN 5 min after
acute stress have failed to detect concomitant up-regulation of CRF
mRNA (Kovács and Sawchenko, 1996
).
The coexistence of CRF and AVP in the same parvocellular subdivision of
the paraventricular neurons has been established (Piekut and Joseph
1986
; Whitnall, 1988
). In addition, it is known that catecholaminergic
innervation of the PVN stimulates the synthesis and the release of AVP
(Alonso et al., 1986
). However, although it is well
established that the HPA axis is co-regulated by AVP, the role of this
peptide in the HPA adaptation during opioid tolerance/dependence has
not been investigated. Present results showing an absence of changes of
AVP in the PVN and ME during morphine withdrawal may suggest that AVP
in these regions could not participate in the pituitary-adrenal
adaptation during chronic opioid exposure. Another possibility is that
activation of AVP might follow a time course distinct from CRF, as has
been observed in a previous work (Kovács and Sawchenko, 1996
).
At present, it is still unclear as to which area of the brain is involved mainly in the expression of opioid tolerance/dependence signs. The regulation of CRF and AVP in other nuclei different from the PVN has not been investigated thoroughly. Present data reflect how other hypothalamic and extrahypothalamic neurons containing CRF also are modified after acute or chronic morphine treatment. The results reported here provide evidence that adaptation to repeated opioid exposure or during withdrawal occurs as a change in CRF and/or AVP response in defined brain areas. Our data demonstrate that, depending on the nucleus, a differential response of CRF and AVP neurons to chronic morphine or to naloxone administration can be observed. Acute administration of naloxone to naive rats was found to result in decreased levels of CRF in the DMN and in the VMN, whereas an increase of the peptide was observed in the AN, without changes in the BNST. After chronic morphine administration, the VMN and the DMN showed decreased CRF, and only AN shows a significant alteration (a decrease) during withdrawal. As for AVP, the AN and the SON showed a reduction in the content of this peptide in morphine-pelleted rats, whereas no changes were observed in these nuclei during withdrawal. We failed to observe modifications of AVP content in the SCN after chronic morphine administration or in morphine-withdrawn rats.
The presence of nerve terminals containing endogenous opioid peptides
impinging on CRF neurons (Roth et al., 1989
) as well as
opioid receptors (Mansour et al., 1995
) has been
demonstrated. Because of the vast variety of functions over which CRF
may exert a modulatory influence as neurotransmitter, and because this
peptide integrates the physiological and behavioral responses of the
organism to different stressors, our data might suggest that the
response of CRF neurons to opioid administration may contribute to the physiological, behavioral and emotional alterations that occur in
opioid-dependent subjects. Concerning our data, a coordinated measurement of CRF/AVP mRNAs (experiments in
progress) will help to verify the exact nature of the changes found
after morphine administration and during opioid withdrawal. In summary,
the present results are consistent with a stimulatory effect of opioid
withdrawal on the activity of noradrenergic neurons in the
hypothalamus, which in turn might activate CRF release from the PVN
then ACTH and corticosterone secretion. In addition, the CRF and AVP
changes in other areas indicate a complex response to naloxone, chronic morphine and opioid withdrawal.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication January 21, 1998.
Received for publication April 24, 1997.
1 This work was supported by DGICYT (PB93-1128 and PM96-0095).
Send reprint requests to: M.V. Milanés, Unit of Pharmacology, University School of Medicine, Campus de Espinardo, 30100 Murcia, Spain.
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Abbreviations |
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HPA, hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal; CRF, corticotropin-releasing factor; AVP, vasopressin; NA, noradrenaline; PVN, paraventricular nucleus; ME, median eminence; BNST, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis; DMN, dorsomedial nucleus; VMN, ventromedial nucleus; AN, arcuate nucleus; SON, supraoptic nucleus; SCN, suprachiasmatic nucleus; MHPG, 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylethylen glycol; ACTH, corticotropin; CNS, central nervous system; RIA, radioimmunoassay; HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography.
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K. H. Skelton, C. B. Nemeroff, and M. J. Owens Spontaneous Withdrawal from the Triazolobenzodiazepine Alprazolam Increases Cortical Corticotropin-Releasing Factor mRNA Expression J. Neurosci., October 20, 2004; 24(42): 9303 - 9312. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Z. Sarnyai, Y. Shaham, and S. C. Heinrichs The Role of Corticotropin-Releasing Factor in Drug Addiction Pharmacol. Rev., June 1, 2001; 53(2): 209 - 244. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. L. Laorden, G. Fuertes, A. González-Cuello, and M. V. Milanés Changes in Catecholaminergic Pathways Innervating Paraventricular Nucleus and Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Response during Morphine Dependence: Implication of alpha 1- and alpha 2-Adrenoceptors J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., May 1, 2000; 293(2): 578 - 584. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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