RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Antinociceptive and response rate-altering effects of kappa opioid agonists, spiradoline, enadoline and U69,593, alone and in combination with opioid antagonists in squirrel monkeys. JF Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics JO J Pharmacol Exp Ther FD American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics SP 1501 OP 1508 VO 271 IS 3 A1 R C Pitts A1 L A Dykstra YR 1994 UL http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/271/3/1501.abstract AB Effects of the kappa opioid agonists, spiradoline (U62,066), enadoline (CI-977) and U69,593, were examined alone and in combination with the opioid antagonists quadazocine and beta-funaltrexamine in squirrel monkeys that responded under a schedule of shock titration. When given alone, each of these agonists increased the intensity at which the monkeys maintained shock 50% of the time (median shock level, MSL). Lower doses of spiradoline, enadoline and U69,593 increased response rates in some monkeys and higher doses decreased response rates in all monkeys. When given in combination with the opioid antagonist quadazocine, the dose-effect curves of each agonist, both for MSL and response rates, were shifted to the right in a dose-related and parallel manner. The slopes for the regression lines of the Schild plots for each agonist-quadazocine interaction approximated unity and apparent pA2 values for quadazocine in combination with these agonists ranged between 6.68 and 6.81 for MSL and between 6.63 and 6.87 for response rate. The effects of these agonists were not changed by an 8.0 mg/kg dose of beta-funaltrexamine that markedly antagonized the effects of morphine. These results parallel those previously obtained with other kappa agonists, such as bremazocine and U50,488 and suggest that the antinociceptive effects of spiradoline, enadoline and U69,593 in the shock-titration procedure in squirrel monkeys relate to activity at non-mu, probably kappa, opioid receptors.