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PERSPECTIVES IN PHARMACOLOGY
Institut für Experimentelle und Klinische Pharmakologie und Toxikologie, Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany (H.U.Z.); and Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, Section of Pharmacology and Center of Neuroscience, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy (G.C.)
Received February 24, 2003; accepted April 16, 2003.
| Abstract |
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The discovery of N/OFQ is a prominent example of so called reverse
pharmacology in which a receptor was known before the corresponding ligand
could be identified (Civelli et al.,
1998
). Soon after the discovery of the
opioid (DOP)
receptor by expression cloning molecular biologists have not only identified
the expected µ and
(MOP and KOP) opioid receptors, but also a
fourth unperceived receptor, which does not bind classical opioids. The human
homolog of this receptor has therefore been termed opioid receptor-like 1
receptor (Mollereau et al.,
1994
). Only 1 year after its discovery, a 17 amino acid
neuropeptide was identified as the endogenous agonist by two independent
groups and called nociceptin (Meunier et
al., 1995
) or orphanin FQ
(Reinscheid et al., 1995
).
Both the peptide and its receptor, now called N/OFQ peptide (NOP) receptor,
share a high degree of homology with classical opioid peptides (namely
dynorphin A) and classical opioid receptors (namely the
opioid peptide
receptor). A first series of behavioral tests has suggested that this peptide
was prorather than antinociceptive, when injected intracerebroventricularly
(i.c.v.). This effect led Meunier et al.
(1995
) to coin the term
nociceptin. Reinscheid et al.
(1995
) called the peptide
orphanin FQ, indicating that the peptide activated a receptor previously
classified as an orphan receptor, whereas the letters F and Q designate the
first and last amino acid of this peptide, phenylalanine and glutamine.
The NOP receptor belongs to the large family of G-protein coupled (7
transmembrane) receptors. After agonist binding the NOP receptor activates
G-proteins of the Gi/Go type, causing an inhibition of
cAMP production, activation of potassium currents and inhibition of
Ca2+ currents, in particular of the N-type
(Moran et al., 2000
). At the
cellular level, all these actions favor inhibition of neuronal activity and a
reduction in transmitter release. The cellular signal transduction pathway
initiated by NOP receptor activation thus appears nearly identical to that of
classical opioids. Despite this close relationship, however, the role of N/OFQ
in pain processing appears considerably more complex than that of classical
opioids.
The available data suggest that N/OFQ can interfere with nociceptive
processing at least at three different levels of integration, where it may
modulate nociception in opposite directions: the spinal cord, supraspinal
sites, and peripheral endings of primary afferent nerve fibers (nociceptors).
Consistent with a role in pain processing, expression of both the NOP receptor
and the N/OFQ peptide is particularly intense in several areas involved in
nociception including the spinal cord dorsal horn, the nucleus raphe magnus,
and the periaqueductal gray (Neal et al.,
1999a
,b
).
Cellular effects of N/OFQ have been thoroughly studied in these CNS areas and
much of our picture how N/OFQ exerts its different effects on pain processing
is based on these results.
| Modulation of Nociceptive Processing by Exogenous N/OFQ |
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A cellular model explaining the antiopioidergic action of supraspinal N/OFQ
is based on seminal studies by Heinricher et al.
(1997
) and Pan et al.
(2000
). The brain stem, in
particular the nucleus raphe magnus of the RVM, appears as a major site of
supraspinal N/OFQ effects on pain processing. In this brain region, different
types of neurons, so called ON and OFF cells, can be distinguished. ON cells
fire immediately before a nociceptive reaction, while OFF cells are inhibited
by the GABAergic ON cells and therefore silent at the same time. Activation of
OFF cells induces spinal antinociception via descending antinociceptive
tracts. µ opioids inhibit ON cells and thereby cause a subsequent
disinhibition of the antinociceptive OFF cells. By contrast, N/OFQ inhibits
nearly all cell types in the RVM (Vaughan
et al., 2001
). Via a direct inhibition of OFF cells, N/OFQ
counteracts the disinhibitory effects of µ agonists on these cells and
thereby reverses opioid-induced supraspinal analgesia. The same mechanism may
also account for the apparent hyperalgesic effect of N/OFQ, providing a
cellular basis for the reversal of stress-induced analgesia by N/OFQ. These
studies demonstrate that the net effects of N/OFQ on nociception at
supraspinal sites strongly depend on the activation state (resting versus
sensitized) of pain controlling neuronal circuits.
Spinal Effects of N/OFQ. Neither the analgesic effect of classical
opioids nor the diverse actions of N/OFQ on pain processing can solely be
explained by its supraspinal actions. Many lines of evidence indicate that the
spinal cord is an equally important CNS area for nociceptive processing and
its modulation by N/OFQ and classical opioids. In particular, the superficial
layers of the spinal cord dorsal horn, where thin- and unmyelinated primary
afferent nerve fibers terminate, represent an important structure for
nociceptive processing. This area constitutes the first site of synaptic
integration in the pain pathway. Although the first functional studies on
N/OFQ concentrated on supraspinal sites, subsequent studies have shown that
mRNA and protein of both the N/OFQ precursor ppN/OFQ and of the NOP receptor
are highly expressed in this structure (e.g., Neal et al.,
1999a
,b
).
While hyperalgesic or antianalgesic effects of N/OFQ dominate after
supraspinal injection, most studies report an antinociceptive action of N/OFQ
after spinal application in a wide variety of animal models of painat
least in nanomolar doses. The models tested include, among others, acute
thermal and mechanical pain and tonic inflammatory as well as neuropathic pain
(for reviews, see Mogil and Pasternak,
2001
; Calò et al.,
2000b
).
Fast excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmission in the spinal cord is
mediated by the amino acids L-glutamate and glycine (together with
GABA), respectively. Several reports have demonstrated that N/OFQ inhibits
excitatory glutamatergic neurotransmission without affecting GABA or glycine
receptor-mediated synaptic responses
(Zeilhofer et al., 2000
;
Luo et al., 2002
). This
inhibition is naloxone-insensitive and absent in
NOP/ mice
(Ahmadi et al., 2001
),
indicating that it is specifically mediated by the NOP receptor. N/OFQ does
not affect the responsiveness of postsynaptic
-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid or
N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors but decreases the synaptic
release of L-glutamate, i.e., acts via a presynaptic site.
Inhibition of glutamatergic transmission by N/OFQ is thus remarkably
reminiscent of the spinal analgesic mechanism of classical opioids and most
likely underlies the well accepted antinociceptive action of spinally applied
N/OFQ. Nevertheless, it should be noted that synaptic connections targeted by
N/OFQ and classical opioids such as methionin-enkephalin are not identical
(Monteillet-Agius et al.,
1998
).
In the light of these findings, it is interesting that very low (attoto
femtomole) doses of N/OFQ can also elicit a pronociceptive in particular
proallodynic action in the spinal cord (for a review, see
Ito et al., 2001
).
Nevertheless, a convincing cellular mechanism for this spinal pronociceptive
action has not been identified yet. A reduction in synaptic glycine release
has been suggested (Ito et al.,
2001
), but a large set of data meanwhile unambiguously indicates
that N/OFQ does not interfere with GABAergic or glycinergic neurotransmission
at the level of the spinal cord (Zeilhofer
et al., 2000
; Ahmadi et al.,
2001
; Luo et al.,
2002
). An alternative explanation might be that N/OFQ specifically
inhibits synaptic glutamate release from low threshold mechanical (A
)
fibers. These fibers control, via glycinergic interneurons, the activity of so
called wide dynamic range neurons. Although this hypothesis could easily
explain how a reduction in glutamate release (from A
-fibers) induces
allodynia, Luo et al. (2002
)
have demonstrated that N/OFQ interferes primarily with the release of
glutamate from nociceptive C- and A
-fibers.
Alternatively, N/OFQ might induce the release of pronociceptive mediators
in the spinal cord similar to what has been described in the periphery (see
below). Two studies by Inoue et al.
(1998
,
1999
) have reported that N/OFQ
induces a Ca2+-dependent release of substance P not only
from the peripheral but also from the central terminals of primary afferent
nociceptive nerve fibers. The underlying signal transduction is only
incompletely understood, but the available data provide indirect evidence that
N/OFQ may trigger phospholipase C- and IP3-dependent
Ca2+ releaseat least in heterologous expression
systems (for a review, see Moran et al.,
2000
). Although unproven, another intriguing hypothesis is that a
reduction in synaptic glutamate release not only inhibits fast excitatory
neurotransmission via
-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic
acid and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors but also
activation ofperhaps inhibitorymetabotropic glutamate receptors.
Taken together, the cellular mechanisms of the pronociceptive effects of N/OFQ
in the spinal cord are still rather obscure, whereas inhibition of excitatory
synaptic transmission presents as a clearly defined cellular mechanism
underlying the spinal analgesia.
The combination of opioid-like analgesia by N/OFQ at the level of the
spinal cord with functional opioid antagonism at supraspinal sites, where most
of the unwanted effects of classical opioids arise, has promoted the idea that
NOP receptor agonists might be better tolerated centrally acting analgesics.
It should however be noted that the only well studied nonpeptide NOP receptor
agonist Ro 64-6198 was anxiolytic, but not antinociceptive in acute pain
models (Jenck et al., 2000
).
Nevertheless, further studies with other NOP receptor agonists and in chronic
pain models are desirable.
Peripheral Effects of N/OFQ. Compared with studies investigating CNS
effects of N/OFQ, only a very limited number of reports have addressed
peripheral actions of N/OFQ on nociceptors. Both the N/OFQ and the NOP
receptor are expressed at rather low levels in dorsal root ganglion cells, but
NOP receptor expression increases after sciatic nerve injury
(Briscini et al., 2002
). A
functional role of peripheral NOP receptors has been demonstrated by Inoue et
al. (1998
), who reported that
N/OFQ injected intraplantar at very low (femtomole) doses induced
Ca2+-dependent substance P release thereby evoking
nociceptive flexor reflexes. At higher (nanomole) doses, N/OFQ prevented
substance P induced flexor reflexes in mice
(Inoue et al., 1999
) and
capsaicin-induced thermal nociception in monkeys
(Ko et al., 2002a
) suggesting
that an additional antinociceptive effect of N/OFQ also exists in the
periphery.
| Other ppN/OFQ Products |
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NST reduces the release of glycine and GABA in the spinal cord dorsal horn
but has no effect on the release of L-glutamate
(Zeilhofer et al., 2000
). This
inhibition is completely retained in mice lacking the NOP receptor
(Ahmadi et al., 2001
),
indicating that NST's action does not require NOP receptors. Pretreatment of
spinal cord slices with pertussis toxin prevented the inhibition, indicating
that NST acted via a so far unidentified seven transmembrane receptor. At
nanomolar doses, NST induces robust pronociceptive effects after i.t.
injection in rats implanted with chronic intrathecal catheters
(Zeilhofer et al., 2000
),
while an antinociceptive effect is observed after low (femtomole) doses of NST
(Okuda-Ashitaka et al., 1998
).
In the spinal cord dorsal horn, inhibition by N/OFQ and NST of excitatory and
inhibitory synaptic transmission, respectively, probably accounts for the
functional antagonism of N/OFQ and NST seen in vivo.
Figure 1 shows how N/OFQ and
NST interfere with synaptic transmission and nociceptive processing in the
spinal cord and at supraspinal sites. At a first glance, it appears surprising
that two neuropeptides with apparently opposing effects on nociception
originate from the same precursor peptide. Presently, however, it is not known
whether both peptides are indeed released from the same neuron and, if so,
whether they are always coreleased. ppN/OFQ, like other neuropeptides, may be
processed in a cell type-specific manner depending on the expression of
specific proprotein convertases (Hallberg
and Nyberg, 2003
). In addition, different peptides may be
transported to and released from distinct nerve terminals even within the same
neuron (Fumagalli and Zanini,
1985
).
|
| Synthetic NOP Receptor Antagonists |
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Local i.c.v. injection of NOP receptor peptide antagonists
([Nphe1]N/OFQ(1-13)NH2, and
[Nphe1,Arg14,Lys15]N/OFQNH2, also
known as UFP-101) was antinociceptive (or antihyperalgesic?) in the tail
withdrawal test (Calò et al.,
2000a
,
2002
). These results are in
excellent agreement with the previous studies using supraspinal N/OFQ
injections. They support a contribution of endogenous N/OFQ to the induction
or maintenance of supraspinal hyperalgesia/antianalgesia. By contrast, spinal
application of J-113397 (also known as compound B;
Ozaki et al., 2000
) increased
pain related behavior in the second phase of the formalin test
(Yamamoto et al., 2001
) and
[Nphe1]N/OFQ(1-13)NH2 facilitated the C-fiber evoked
flexor reflex in spinalized rats (Xu et
al., 2002
), which is consistent with the antinociceptive effect of
spinally applied N/OFQ. Nevertheless, it should be noted that another NOP
receptor antagonist (JTC-801) has repeatedly been shown by different groups to
be antinociceptive after spinal application in the mouse and rat formalin test
and in the mouse hot plate assay (Shinkai
et al., 2000
; Muratani et al.,
2002
; Yamada et al.,
2002
). At present, it is not entirely clear whether this apparent
antinociceptive effect is indeed mediated via an antagonism at NOP receptors.
Unlike the peptide NOP receptor antagonists, JTC-801 exhibits a rather poor
(4-fold) selectivity for the NOP receptor over the MOP receptors in the rat
(Yamada et al., 2002
). It
would be very instructive if these experiments were repeated in NOP receptor
deficient mice. Although the available data are still quite limited, the
majority of reports are at least consistent with the view that not only
exogenously injected but also endogenous N/OFQ contributes to spinal
analgesia, but is pronociceptive at supraspinal sites.
Systemic administration of nonpeptide NOP receptor antagonists could in
principle clarify, whether spinal analgesia or supraspinal antianalgesia of
endogenous N/OFQ dominates in vivo. Unfortunately, such studies have not yet
provided a consistent view. J-113397 was inactive in one study
(Ozaki et al., 2000
), while
JTC-801 produced analgesia in two other studies (Shinaki et al., 2000;
Yamada et al., 2002
). Part of
these discrepancies may be due to the limited selectivity of JTC-801 in the
rat and to rather unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties of J-113397 including
poor distribution in vivo.
| Genetically Modified Mice |
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Despite these conflicting results, most researchers in the field agree that
NOP/ and
ppN/OFQ/ mice do not exhibit
altered nociceptive behavior under resting conditions. In this respect, NOP
receptor and ppN/OFQ knock-out mice resemble those lacking µ opioid
receptors, which also show only subtle changes in their sensitivity to
"physiological" pain (Kieffer
and Gaveriaux-Ruff, 2002
). Thus, the apparent lack of a
nociceptive phenotype does not preclude an involvement of N/OFQ in endogenous
pain control. Interestingly, when
NOP/ mice are exposed to tonic
painful stimulation as in the formalin test or the Hargreaves model of thermal
hyperalgesia, they show increased nociceptive responses
(Depner et al., 2003
;
Inoue et al., 2003
). Genetic
ablation of NOP receptors is therefore in good agreement with the
pharmacological study by Yamamoto et al.
(2001
), who found that
spinally injected J-113397 increased nociceptive behavior in the second, but
not in the first, phase of the formalin test. Baseline N/OFQ levels appear to
be too low to affect pain sensitivity and acute painful stimulation, e.g., in
the tail-flick test, is too short to elicit sufficient release of N/OFQ. One
might therefore argue that tonic nociceptive input is required for N/OFQ
release in the spinal cord. Unfortunately, only very little is known about the
upstream innervation of ppN/OFQ expressing neurons in the spinal cord and
elsewhere in the CNS. It is therefore at present unknown, which neuronal
circuits drive the release of N/OFQ and of other potential ppN/PFQ products. A
few studies have so far analyzed endogenous N/OFQ levels in the serum or
cerebrospinal fluid of patients. One study
(Ko et al., 2002b
) indeed
found increased N/OFQ blood levels in patients suffering from chronic pain
compared with acute pain or healthy subjects. Furthermore, prolonged
nociceptive stimulation may not only evoke release of N/OFQ but probably also
induces expression of N/OFQ in the spinal cord dorsal horn
(Rosén et al., 2000
)
and in primary afferent nociceptive neurons
(Itoh et al., 2001
).
If one considers the involvement of N/OFQ in stress adaptation
(Köster et al., 1999
;
Jenck et al., 2000
), it is
probably not too far fetched to assume that acute stress might release N/OFQ
from supraspinal sites (Devine et al.,
2003
). As most pain testing in animals is accompanied by some
stress exposure, it is not unexpected that supraspinal (i.c.v.) injection of
NOP receptor antagonists produced analgesia in most studies, i.e., reversed
the antianalgesic action of endogenous N/OFQ released in response to stress
exposure.
Addictive Properties and Development of Tolerance Addictive or
rewarding properties classify classical opioids as drugs with significant
abuse potential. Unlike classical opioid analgesics, neither N/OFQ nor the NOP
receptor agonist Ro-64-6198 show rewarding or aversive properties in the rat
conditioned place preference test (Devine
et al., 1996
; Le Pen et al.,
2002
) suggesting that they lack addictive properties. N/OFQ might
even posses antirewarding properties directed against several different agents
including ethanol and morphine (Ciccocioppo
et al., 2000
). Despite this apparent lack of rewarding properties,
tolerance develops rapidly against the spinal analgesic effect of N/OFQ
(Hao et al., 1997
).
Interestingly, the anxiolytic properties of Ro 64-6198
(Dautzenberg et al., 2001
) as
well as the antihyperalgesic effects of i.c.v. injected
[Nphe1]N/OFQ(1-13)NH2
(Di Giannuario et al., 2001
)
do not undergo tolerance development.
Apart from its genuine pain modulatory effects, the N/OFQ system has
attracted considerable interest through its possible involvement in opioid
dependence and tolerance. Several articles have suggested that at the systems
level the release of antiopioid substances might play a major role
(Rothman, 1992
). The
functional opioid antagonistic effect of N/OFQ has led researchers to
speculate about a role of N/OFQ in the development of this phenomenon.
Meanwhile, there is considerable experimental evidence that N/OFQ may indeed
be crucially involvedat least in mice. Two articles by Ueda et al.
(1997
,
2000
) have shown that NOP
receptor deficient mice develop significantly (50%) less reduction in morphine
analgesia during a 5 days treatment. A strong reversal of morphine tolerance
was also seen in mice systemically treated with the NOP receptor antagonist
J-113397 (Ueda et al., 2000
)
or treated i.c.v. with [Nphe1]N/OFQ(1-13)NH2
(Rizzi et al., 2000
). Both
genetic ablation of NOP receptors and NOP receptor antagonism with J-113397
also attenuated withdrawal symptoms evoked by naloxone injection in morphine
dependent mice (Ueda et al.,
2000
; Kest et al.,
2001
). Given the many different mediators that have been
implicated in morphine tolerance/dependence, further studies will have to
verify that N/OFQ's role is really as critical as the present studies
suggest.
Summary More than 7 years after its discovery, our understanding of the role of the N/OFQ-NOP receptor system in pain processing is far from being complete. Nevertheless, it has already become clear that NOP receptor ligands will exhibit a pharmacological profile quite different from the currently available analgesics. They may for example combine analgesic efficacy with anxiolytic and antidepressant activity and may potentially lack rewarding properties and tolerance development. Potential indications in pain therapy might include the use of NOP receptor agonists as solely spinally acting analgesics, perhaps only in well defined subgroups of patients, and the use of NOP receptor antagonists alone or in combination with morphine, which might reduce the development of tolerance.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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ABBREVIATIONS: N/OFQ, nociceptin/orphanin FQ; MOP, µ opioid
peptide receptor; NOP receptor, N/OFQ peptide receptor; CNS, central nervous
system; RVM, rostral ventromedial medulla; NST, nocistatin; KOP,
opioid peptide receptor; DOP;
opioid peptide receptor; Ro 64-6198,
(1S,3aS)-8-(2,3,3a,4,5,6-hexahydro-1H-phenalon-1-yl)-1-phenyl-1,3,8-triza-spiro[4.5]decan-4-one;
J-113397,
(1-[3R,4R)-1-cyclooctymethyl-3-hydroxymethyl-4-piperidyl]-3-ethyl-1,3-dihydro-2H-benzimidazol-2-one;
JTC-801,
N-(4-amino-2-methylquinolin-6-yl)-2-(4-ethylphenoxymethyl)-benzamide
monohydrochloride.
Address correspondence to: Dr. Hanns Ulrich Zeilhofer, Institut für Experimentelle und Klinische Pharmakologie und Toxikologie, Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Fahrstrasse 17, D-91054 Erlangen, Germany. E-mail: zeilhofer{at}pharmakologie.uni-erlangen.de
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