M Aceves1, B B Mathai1, M A Hook1. 1. Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics, Texas A&M Health Science Center, Bryan, TX, USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The current study aimed to evaluate the contribution(s) of specific opioid receptor systems to the analgesic and detrimental effects of morphine, observed after spinal cord injury in prior studies. STUDY DESIGN: We used specific opioid receptor agonists to assess the effects of μ- (DAMGO), δ- (DPDPE) and κ- (GR89696) opioid receptor activation on locomotor (Basso, Beattie and Bresnahan scale, tapered beam and ladder tests) and sensory (girdle, tactile and tail-flick tests) recovery in a rodent contusion model (T12). We also tested the contribution of non-classic opioid binding using [+]- morphine. METHODS: First, a dose-response curve for analgesic efficacy was generated for each opioid agonist. Baseline locomotor and sensory reactivity was assessed 24 h after injury. Subjects were then treated with an intrathecal dose of a specific agonist and re-tested after 30 min. To evaluate the effects on recovery, subjects were treated with a single dose of an agonist and both locomotor and sensory function were monitored for 21 days. RESULTS: All agonists for the classic opioid receptors, but not the [+]- morphine enantiomer, produced antinociception at a concentration equivalent to a dose of morphine previously shown to produce strong analgesic effects (0.32 μmol). DAMGO and [+]- morphine did not affect long-term recovery. GR89696, however, significantly undermined the recovery of locomotor function at all doses tested. CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of these data, we hypothesize that the analgesic efficacy of morphine is primarily mediated by binding to the classic μ-opioid receptor. Conversely, the adverse effects of morphine may be linked to activation of the κ-opioid receptor. Ultimately, elucidating the molecular mechanisms underlying the effects of morphine is imperative to develop safe and effective pharmacological interventions in a clinical setting. SETTING: USA. SPONSORSHIP: Grant DA31197 to MA Hook and the NIDA Drug Supply Program.
OBJECTIVE: The current study aimed to evaluate the contribution(s) of specific opioid receptor systems to the analgesic and detrimental effects of morphine, observed after spinal cord injury in prior studies. STUDY DESIGN: We used specific opioid receptor agonists to assess the effects of μ- (DAMGO), δ- (DPDPE) and κ- (GR89696) opioid receptor activation on locomotor (Basso, Beattie and Bresnahan scale, tapered beam and ladder tests) and sensory (girdle, tactile and tail-flick tests) recovery in a rodent contusion model (T12). We also tested the contribution of non-classic opioid binding using [+]- morphine. METHODS: First, a dose-response curve for analgesic efficacy was generated for each opioid agonist. Baseline locomotor and sensory reactivity was assessed 24 h after injury. Subjects were then treated with an intrathecal dose of a specific agonist and re-tested after 30 min. To evaluate the effects on recovery, subjects were treated with a single dose of an agonist and both locomotor and sensory function were monitored for 21 days. RESULTS: All agonists for the classic opioid receptors, but not the [+]- morphine enantiomer, produced antinociception at a concentration equivalent to a dose of morphine previously shown to produce strong analgesic effects (0.32 μmol). DAMGO and [+]- morphine did not affect long-term recovery. GR89696, however, significantly undermined the recovery of locomotor function at all doses tested. CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of these data, we hypothesize that the analgesic efficacy of morphine is primarily mediated by binding to the classic μ-opioid receptor. Conversely, the adverse effects of morphine may be linked to activation of the κ-opioid receptor. Ultimately, elucidating the molecular mechanisms underlying the effects of morphine is imperative to develop safe and effective pharmacological interventions in a clinical setting. SETTING: USA. SPONSORSHIP: Grant DA31197 to MA Hook and the NIDA Drug Supply Program.
According to the Consortium for Spinal Cord Medicine, in the critical first
few days following spinal cord injury (SCI) many patients will experience
distressing pain and sensitivity that arises from trauma to the cord, the spinal
nerves, the spinal fracture, or from concomitant injuries (1). This pain will typically be treated with opioids and NSAIDs.
Indeed, Neighbor et al. (2004) reported that 48% of 540 patients treated by a trauma
team received opioid analgesia within 3 hours of arrival to the emergency department
(2). While this study focused on the
under-treatment of pain in the emergency setting, studies in our laboratory suggest
that the effects of analgesics may be altered in the pathophysiological context of
an injury. Specifically, our studies suggest that opioid use is contraindicated in
the early phase of SCI (3-7). Acute morphine treatment increases tissue
loss at the injury site, increases mortality, undermines weight gain, reduces
recovery of motor and sensory function, and increases pain reactivity, even weeks
after treatment (3-7). Based on these data, it would be tempting to suggest that
morphine be eliminated as an analgesic after SCI. However, as pain is one of the
most debilitating consequences of SCI, we cannot afford to simply remove any
potential analgesic therapy. Rather, it is imperative that we further our
understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying the effects of morphine, and
develop pharmacological interventions that can be used to improve the safety and
efficacy of opioids.To address this, the current experiments evaluated the consequences of
selective opioid receptor activation in the SCI model. Morphine is primarily a
μ (mu)-opioid receptor (MOR) agonist, but it also interacts with the κ
(kappa)-opioid receptor (KOR) and δ (delta)-opioid receptor (DOR), and with
toll-like receptors (TLRs) in a non-classic fashion (8, 9). This suggests that morphine
may exert adverse effects through any of these receptor systems. For example,
whereas activation of the MOR is typically associated with analgesia, binding of
morphine to the MOR is also thought to initiate G-protein mediated protein kinase C
(PKC) translocation and activation, promoting the removal of the NMDA receptor
Mg+ plug (10) and allowing
Ca2+ influx. Chronic morphine exposure is also associated with down
regulation of glutamate transporters, directly contributing to the heightened
activity of NMDA receptors (11, 12). In this way, morphine may act through the
MOR to potentiate NMDA receptor activation, maintaining central sensitization and
hyperalgesia in the neural system, and leading to excitotoxic cell death (13, 14).
Morphine may also undermine recovery of function after SCI by activating the KOR
system. Behaviorally, Faden and colleagues have demonstrated that intrathecal
administration of dynorphin (an endogenous KOR ligand) causes hindlimb paralysis in
neurologically intact rats, and blocking the KOR improves neurological outcomes
after a contusion SCI (15, 16).Alternatively, morphine may exert its negative effects through activation of
non-classic opioid receptors found on immune-competent cells (17-20). For example,
research suggests that opioid ligands can bind to TLR4 (the receptor that recognizes
lipopolysaccharide) and its accessory molecules in a non-stereoselective manner,
leading to glial activation and initiating the inflammatory response (9, 21-23). The subsequent release of
pro-inflammatory cytokines in the spinal cord has been shown to oppose opioid
analgesia and facilitate pain (24, 25). Importantly, in our SCI model, we have
shown that morphine administration results in increased pro-inflammatory cytokine
expression at the injury site, and that blocking the interleukin-1 (IL-1) receptor
during treatment with this analgesic prevents the morphine-induced attenuation of
locomotor recovery (4). These data suggest
that by binding to non-classic opioid receptors, morphine may alter the normal
immune response following SCI, resulting in the adverse long-term consequences
typically observed in this model.Based on these hypotheses, and in order to more clearly dissociate the
beneficial (analgesic) and deleterious consequences of morphine treatment, the
experiments presented here examined the effects of classic and non-classic opioid
receptor activation through the use of selective opioid agonists. Experiment 1
compared the analgesic efficacy of the classic (μ (DAMGO), δ (DPDPE),
κ-2 (GR89696)) and non-classic ([+]- morphine) opioid agonists. All agonists
for the classic opioid receptors produced analgesia at a concentration equivalent to
an effective dose of morphine (0.32 μmol) but, not surprisingly, the
unnatural [+]- enantiomer of morphine did not produce analgesia. Experiment 2
assessed the long-term effects of the opioid agonists on the recovery of locomotor
function. Whereas, DAMGO and [+]- morphine did not affect long-term recovery,
GR89696 significantly undermined locomotor function. The selective KOR agonist also
increased the lesion size caudal to the injury site. Activation of the KOR system is
sufficient to undermine locomotor recovery after SCI.
General Methods
Subjects
The subjects were male Sprague-Dawley rats obtained from Harlan
(Houston, TX). They were approximately 90-110 days old (300-350 g) and were
individually housed in Plexiglas bins [45.7 (length) × 23.5 (width)
× 20.3 (height) cm] with food and water continuously available. Food
consumption and subject weights were recorded daily. Following surgery, subjects
were manually expressed in the morning (8:00-9:30 a.m.) and in the evening
(6:00-7:30 p.m.) until they regained full bladder control (which was
operationally defined as three consecutive days with an empty bladder at the
time of expression), and were checked daily for signs of autophagia and spastic
hypertonia. Subjects were classified as having spastic hypertonia if they showed
abnormal increases in muscle tone accompanied by exaggerated tendon jerks. The
rats were maintained on a 12 hour light/dark cycle and all behavioral testing
was conducted during the light cycle. All of the experiments reported here were
reviewed and approved by the Institutional Animal Care Committee at Texas
A&M University and all NIH guidelines for the care and use of animal
subjects were followed.
Experimental Design
In Experiment 1 (A-D) dose-response curves were generated, recording
sensory reactivity to nociceptive stimuli after treatment with the selective
opioid receptor agonists. In total, 48 subjects (n=4 for each agonist dose) were
used for this experiment. Experiment 2 (A-C) assessed the effects of opioid
receptor activation on long-term recovery of function. In total, 72 subjects
(n=8 for each agonist dose) were used for this experiment.
Surgery
Subjects received a moderate contusion injury using the Infinite Horizon
spinal cord impactor (PSI, Fairfax Station, VA). Briefly, subjects were
anesthetized with isoflurane (5%, gas), and after a stable level of anesthesia
was reached, the concentration of isoflurane was lowered to 2-3%. The subject's
back was shaved and disinfected with iodine and a 5.0 cm incision was made over
the spinal cord. Two incisions were made on the vertebral column on each side of
the dorsal spinous processes, extending about 2 cm rostral and caudal to the
T12-T13 segment. Muscle and connective tissue were then dissected to expose the
underlying vertebral segments. Musculature around the transverse processes was
cleared to allow for clamping of the vertebral spinal column. Next, the dorsal
spinous processes at T12-T13 were removed (laminectomy), and the spinal tissue
exposed. The dura remained intact. The vertebral column was fixed within the IH
device using two pairs of Adson forceps. A moderate injury was produced using an
impact force of 150 kdynes and a 1 s dwell time. After injury, a 15-cm-long
polyethylene (PE-10) cannula, fitted with a 0.23 cm (diameter) stainless steel
wire (SWGX-090; Small Parts), was threaded 2 cm under the vertebrae immediately
caudal to the injury site. The tubing was inserted into the subarachnoid space.
To prevent cannula movement, the exposed end of the tubing was secured to the
vertebrae rostral to the injury using tissue adhesive (Vetbond). The wire was
then pulled from the tubing and the wound was closed using Michel clips. To help
prevent infection, subjects were treated with 100 000 units/kg Pfizerpen
(penicillin G potassium) immediately after surgery and again 2 days later. For
the first 24 h after surgery, rats were placed in a recovery room maintained at
26.6 °C. To compensate for fluid loss, subjects were given 3 ml of saline
after surgery. Michel clips were removed 14 d after surgery.
Drug Preparation
DAMGO (MOR), DPDPE (DOR), and GR89696 (KOR) were obtained from
Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). The unnatural [+]- enantiomer of morphine
(National Institute of Drug Abuse, Bethesda, MD) was also tested. DAMGO and
DPDPE were dissolved in 10 μL of distilled water. GR89696 was dissolved
in 10 μL of 34% DMSO solution. [+]- morphine was dissolved in 10 N
hydrochloric acid and then titrated with 1N sodium hydroxide to pH 5–6,
which was diluted to the intended concentration with 0.9 % saline (16 μL)
for injection. In all cases, the drugs were administered intrathecally (i.t.),
followed by a 10 μL injection of saline to flush the catheter. Drug
administration took place 24 h following surgery.
Assessments of Sensory Reactivity
Thermal reactivity was assessed immediately before, and 30 min after,
drug administration using radiant heat in the tail-flick test. Subjects were
placed in restraining tubes and allowed to acclimate to the tail-flick apparatus
(IITC Inc., Life Science, CA) and testing room (maintained at 26.5°C) for
15 min. Prior to testing, the temperature of the light, focused on the tail, was
set to elicit a baseline tail-flick response in approximately 4 s in an intact
rat. This pre-set temperature was then maintained across the SCI subjects. In
testing, the latency to flick the tail away from the radiant heat source (light)
was recorded. If a subject failed to respond, the test trial was automatically
terminated after 8 s of heat exposure. Two tests occurred at 2-minute intervals,
and the last tail-flick latency was recorded.To test mechanical reactivity, von Frey filaments (Semmes-Weinstein
Anesthesiometer, Stoelting Co., Chicago, IL) of increasing strength were applied
every 2s in sequence to the plantar surface of the paw. The stimuli were
presented until subjects exhibited a motor (paw withdrawal) and vocalization
response. The intensity of the stimuli that produced the responses was reported
using the formula provided by Semmes-Weinstein: Intensity=log10 (10,000 * g
force). If one or both responses (motor and vocal) were not observed, testing
was terminated at a force of 300 g. Each subject was tested twice on each foot
in a counterbalanced ABBA order.Tactile reactivity was also assessed at the level of injury using the
girdle test (26). For this test, the
girdle region was shaved and a grid map of the girdle zone for allodynic
responding was made on the rats using an indelible marker (44 squares). To
ensure that the rats remained calm for testing, they were handled for 5 minutes
immediately prior to beginning the girdle test. A von Frey filament with bending
force of 204.14 mN (26 g force) was then applied to each point on the grid, and
vocalization responses were recorded and mapped onto a grid map of that animal.
Since animals do not normally vocalize to this stimulus, a vocalization response
indicated that a noxious stimulus was experienced. In mapping the area of
response, the number of vocalizations are recorded (Nv) and normalized by the
following formula: (Nv × 100)/total number of applications (44), indicating the percent vocalizations
out of the total number of applications. To evaluate the long-term recovery of
sensory function in Experiment 2, reactivity thresholds were re-assessed after
day 21 post injury, as described above.
Locomotor Recovery
Locomotor behavior was assessed for 21 days post-injury, using the
Basso, Beattie and Bresnahan (BBB) scale (27) in an open enclosure (a blue children's wading pool, 99 cm in
diameter, 23 cm deep). Baseline motor function was assessed on the day following
injury and prior to drug treatment. Locomotor behavior was then scored once per
day for 1 week (days 2–7). Subjects were scored every other day from day
9 to day 15 and every third day on days 18 and 21. Because rodents often remain
motionless (freeze) when first introduced to a new apparatus, subjects were
acclimated to the observation fields for 5 min per day for 3 days prior to
surgery. Each subject was placed in the open field and observed for 4 min. Care
was taken to ensure that all investigators’ scoring behavior had high
intra- and inter- observer reliability (scores were subjected to a Pearson
correlation, with a minimum coefficient of 0.89) and that they were blind to the
subject's experimental treatment.Locomotor scores were transformed, as described by Ferguson et al.
(28), to help assure that the data
were amendable to parametric analyses. Briefly, this transformation pools BBB
scores of 2–4, removing a discontinuity in the scale. The transformation
also pools scores from a region of the scale (scores of 14–21) that is
very seldom used under the present injury parameters. By pooling these scores,
we obtain an ordered scale that is relatively continuous with units that have
approximately equivalent interval spacing. Meeting these criteria allows us to
apply metric operations (computation of mean performance across legs), improves
the justification for parametric statistical analyses, and increases statistical
power.Additional measures of motor recovery were obtained at the end of the
21-day recovery period using ladder walk (29) and beam walk (30-32) tasks. Prior to testing, subjects were
habituated to the experimental context for 3 days (8 min per day). During this
period of familiarization, they were trained to traverse a wide beam (48.3 cm)
to enter a black box positioned at the end of the beam runway. The beginning of
the runway is brightly lit, motivating subjects to move toward the dark box.
They were left in the box for 2 min after they had traversed the beam. Subjects
were then tested on the beam and ladder walk test.The beam walk test provides a comparative index of the postural
stability of the subjects, as well as a gross measure of paw placement
abilities. In this test, the subject's ability to traverse a tapered was
assessed. The beam was 6.75 in (17.14 cm) wide at the start, and 0.375 in (0.95
cm) wide at the other end. We recorded the width at which each foot failed to
plantar place on the beam. The average width across the two legs was used as an
index of beam walk performance.The ladder task provides a measure of the extent to which experimental
manipulations affect the fine motor abilities of the hindpaws. In the ladder
walk test, the subjects were required to cross a horizontal ladder (20 cm wide;
37 rungs at 2.5 cm spacing) in order to reach the black box. Using post hoc
frame-by-frame video analyses, we then recorded how many times the subjects did
not successfully place their hindpaws (their paws slipped between the rungs).
Subjects that failed to plantar place on the ladder were given a maximum score
of 22 footslips.
Histology
At the end of behavioral testing, subjects were deeply anesthetized (100
mg/kg of beuthanasia, i.p.) and perfused intracardially with 4%
paraformaldehyde. A 1-cm-long segment of the spinal cord that included the
lesion center was taken and prepared for cryostat sectioning. The tissue was
sectioned coronally (20 μm) and every 10th slice was preserved
for staining. All sections were stained with cresyl violet for Nissl substance
and luxol fast blue for myelin (33, 34).The total cross-sectional area of the cord and spared tissue was
assessed at the lesion center using Neurolucida software (MFB Bioscience, USA).
Sections ± 600, 1200, and 1800 μm from the lesion center (rostral
and caudal) were also traced and analyzed. Four indices of lesion magnitude were
derived: lesion, residual gray matter, residual white matter, and width. To
determine the area of lesion, an observer who was blind to the experimental
treatments, traced around the boundaries of cystic formations and areas of dense
gliosis (27). Nissl-stained areas that
contained neurons and glia of approximately normal densities denoted residual
gray matter. White matter was judged spared in myelin-stained areas lacking
dense gliosis and swollen fibers. The total area of each cross-section was
derived by summing the areas of damage, and gray and white matter. Width was
determined from the most lateral points across the transverse plane. These
analyses yielded six parameters for each section: white matter area, gray matter
area, spared tissue (white + gray), damaged tissue area, net area (white + gray
+ damage), and section width.To control for variability in section area across subjects, we applied a
correction factor derived from standard undamaged cord sections, taken from
age-matched controls. This correction factor is based on section widths and is
multiplied by all area measurements to standardize area across analyses (35). By standardizing area across sections
we were able to estimate the degree to which tissue is “missing”
(i.e., tissue loss from atrophy, necrosis, or apoptosis). An accurate assessment
of the degree to which a treatment has impacted, or lesioned, the cord includes
both the remaining “damaged” tissue as well as resolved lesioned
areas. When we sum the amount of “missing” tissue and the measured
“damaged” area, we can derive an index of the relative lesion (%
relative lesion) in each section that is comparable across sections. We can also
compute the relative percent of gray and white matter remaining in each section,
relative to intact controls. These measures are highly correlated with various
measures of behavioral performance including BBB locomotor scores, recovery of
bladder function, and reactivity to shock (35).
Statistical Analysis
Change from baseline scores [Reactivity after drug - Reactivity prior to
drug] were used to assess the analgesic efficacy of the specific opioid receptor
agonists. The scores were analyzed using analysis of variance (ANOVA), with a
Duncan correction for post-hoc tests. Scores were also subjected to trend
analyses (polynomial regressions for linear and quadratic contrasts) to
characterize dose-dependent changes in behavior. Individual dose groups were
further evaluated using paired t-tests.In experiments with a continuous independent variable (e.g., recovery of
locomotor function across days), mixed-design ANOVAs were used. Because
pre-treatment locomotor performance, assessed with the BBB scale, can account
for a large variance in recovery across subjects, analysis of covariance
(ANCOVA) were also used when appropriate (e.g., when day 1 scores were a
significant covariant). Significant between-subject differences were further
analyzed by comparing group means using Duncan's New Multiple Range Test
(p <0.05). Group differences on dichotomous
variables (e.g., autophagia) were evaluated using chi-square probability tests.
This test allows for comparisons of simple (2 × 2) frequency tables with
relatively small samples.
Statement of Ethics
We certify that all applicable institutional and governmental regulations
concerning the ethical use of animals were followed during the course of this
research.
Results
Experiment 1: Analgesic efficacy
Drug administration took place 24 h following surgery. After baseline
motor and sensory assessments, rats were assigned to treatment conditions that
were balanced across BBB scores. Each subject then received a single dose of a
specific agonist. For the assessment of analgesic efficacy, a dose-response
curve was generated for each agonist beginning with a molar concentration
equivalent to an effective dose of morphine (90 μg or 0.32 μmol),
as established in previous studies (Hook et al., 2007, 2009, 2011). Subsequent
doses were chosen based on the analgesia observed.
Experiment 1A. Analgesic efficacy of DAMGO
Similar to the effects of intrathecal morphine administration, DAMGO
produced strong analgesia for all measures of nociceptive reactivity (Figure 1). In the tail flick test, the
latency to move the tail away from the stimulus increased following drug
administration at all doses tested. Although approaching significance, an
ANOVA on change from baseline values did not detect any differences across
groups (F (3, 12) = 3.42, p = 0.053). A
trend analysis, however, showed a significant linear effect, with analgesic
efficacy increasing as doses increased (F (1, 12) = 9.81,
p < 0.05). Individual paired t-tests showed
significantly different changes in response latency relative to baseline
values at the highest doses, 0.16 μmol (t =
−4.615, p < 0.05) and 0.32 μmol
(t = −11.55, p < 0.05).
In fact, subjects that received 0.32 μmol of DAMGO, a dose
commensurate with an effective dose of morphine, did not flick their tail at
all during presentation of the heat stimulus (the test was automatically
terminated at 8 seconds to prevent tissue injury).
Figure 1
Analgesic efficacy of intrathecal opioid receptor agonists. These graphs depict
the effects of a single, intrathecal administration of DAMGO (A, E, I, M), DPDPE
(B, F, J, N), GR89696 (C, G, K, O) or [+]- morphine (D, H, L, P) on sensory
reactivity. The analgesic efficacy of each specific opioid receptor agonist was
determined by comparing change from baseline scores on tests of thermal (A-D)
and mechanical reactivity (motor (E-H) and vocal (I-L) thresholds). At-level
pain was also assessed using the girdle test (M-P). * p
< 0.05.
To verify the effectiveness of drug treatment, both spinal (motor)
and supraspinal (vocal) measures of nociceptive reactivity were also
recorded during von Frey stimulation. The results demonstrated significant
differences across doses for motor (F (3, 12)=4.39,
p < 0.05) but not vocal (F (3,
12)=1.83, p > 0.05) responses (Figure 1). Trend analyses revealed a significant linear
effect for motor reactivity (F (1, 12)=12.11,
p < 0.05), but only approached significance for
vocal reactivity (F (1, 12)=4.52, p =
0.055). As in the tail flick test, individual t-tests showed significant
effects of DAMGO treatment at the highest doses. Compared to baseline,
significantly increased thresholds were observed at 0.16 μmol
(t = −4.57, p < 0.05)
and 0.32 μmol (t = −5.09, p
< 0.05) for motor, and at 0.32 μmol (t =
−3.83, p < 0.05) for vocal responses.There were no significant differences across doses for girdle
reactivity (F (3,12) = 1.80, p >
0.05). As shown in Figure 1, while
there was a tendency for decreased reactivity in subjects treated with the
highest doses of DAMGO (0.32 μmol and 0.16 μmol), a trend
analysis did not yield a significant effect (F= 4.16,
p = 0.06).
Experiment 1B. Analgesic efficacy of DPDPE
Administration of DPDPE, a selective agonist for the DOR, produced
mild analgesia (Figure 1). In the tail
flick test, response latency increased at higher doses (0.16 and 0.32
μmol), but an ANOVA on change from baseline values did not detect any
significant differences across groups (F (2, 8) = 2.53,
p > 0.05). Trend analyses showed that a linear
effect approached, but did not reach, significance (F (2,
8) = 2.53, p > 0.059). Furthermore, no significant
pre- to post-treatment changes were observed using individual t-tests. As
opposed to the effects of DAMGO, even the highest dose of DPDPE (0.32
μmol) failed to completely abolish the tail flick response.Similarly, no significant differences across doses were observed on
motor (F (2, 8) = .993, p > 0.05)
or vocal (F (2, 8) = 3.73, p >
0.05) responses using the von Frey test. Individual t-tests, however, showed
that DPDPE significantly increased the threshold for vocalization at the
0.16 μmol (t = −3.37, p
< 0.05), but not the 0.32 μmol, dose. No effects on girdle
reactivity were observed after DPDPE administration (F (2,
8) = 1.44, p > 0.05).
Experiment 1C. Analgesic efficacy of GR89696
Like DAMGO, the KOR agonist produced a strong analgesic response on
the tests of thermal and mechanical reactivity (Figure 1). Subjects treated with GR89696 showed
increased latencies on the tail flick test across all doses, when compared
to baseline values. The highest dose administered (0.32 μmol)
resulted in complete analgesia. Although no significant differences were
observed across the doses using ANOVAs (F (3, 12) = 1.15,
p > 0.05), individual t-tests showed a
significant effect of treatment at the highest doses, 0.16 μmol
(t = −3.38, p < 0.05)
and 0.32 μmol (t = −10.13, p
< 0.05), when compared to pre-treatment values.On the von Frey test of tactile reactivity, GR89696 administration
appeared to raise motor and vocal response thresholds when compared to
pre-treatment values (Figure 1). As
with the tail flick test, no statistically significant differences were
observed across doses for either motor (F (3, 12) = 0.16,
p > 0.05) or vocal (F (3, 12) =
0.70, p > 0.05) responses. Individual t-tests
indicated that 0.16 μmol of GR89696, however, significantly increased
the threshold for motor reactivity at 30 minutes post-treatment
(t = −6.79, p <
0.05).No effects on girdle reactivity were observed after treatment with
GR89696 (F (3, 12) = 1.08, p >
0.05). Interestingly, however, in addition to analgesia, subjects that were
treated with GR89696 (irrespective of dose) displayed signs of spontaneous
pain (vocalizations, writhing, and agitation in the absence of external
stimulation) following the intrathecal injection. As opposed to the
Straub-like effects of DAMGO, subjects that received GR89696 showed
continued movement while in the restraining tubes and repeated vocalizations
in the absence of stimulation. This behavior was not exhibited by
vehicle-treated controls.
Experiment 1D. Analgesic efficacy of [+]- morphine
Selective binding to non-classic opioid receptors, using the
unnatural [+]- enantiomer of morphine, did not result in analgesia (Figure 1). A starting dose of 0.32
μmol, which was effective for all of the classic opioid receptor
agonists, did not produce analgesia on any of the tests. There were no
significant differences between pre- and post-treatment scores on the
tail-flick test (t = −1.83, p
> 0.05), or on motor (t = 3.00, p
> 0.05) or vocal (t = 1.73, p
> 0.05) reactivity to mechanical stimuli. Similarly, no effects were
observed for responses to at-level stimulation using the girdle test
(t = −2.03, p > 0.05).
Since [+]- morphine did not show any analgesic efficacy at the highest dose
in any of these behavioral tests, lower doses were not tested.
Experiment 2: Recovery of Function
To assess the long-term effects of opioid receptor activation after SCI,
subjects were also administered a single intrathecal dose of DAMGO, GR89696, or
[+]- morphine 24 hours following contusion, and monitored for a 21-day recovery
period. For these experiments, low and high doses were chosen based on the
results of Experiment 1 (only the 0.32 μmol dose was tested in the case
of [+]- morphine). Since the literature does not point to a detrimental role of
DOR activation, and due to its limited analgesic profile (see Figure 1), the long-term effects of DPDPE
administration were not assessed.
Experiment 2A. Effects of DAMGO on recovery following SCI
As can be seen in Figure 2A,
administration of DAMGO did not significantly affect recovery of locomotor
function at any of the doses tested. Locomotor scores collected before
treatment on day 1 did not differ across dose groups (F (2,
21) = 0.03, p > 0.05). Mean BBB scores on day 1
ranged from 2.13 ± 0.41, for subjects treated with vehicle, to 2.25
± 0.41, for the 0.32 μmol dose group. A mixed-design ANOVA
also showed that there were no significant differences between the groups
across the recovery period (F (2, 21) = 0.33,
p > 0.05). Motor recovery was further evaluated
at the end of the 21-day recovery period using the tapered beam and ladder
walk tests. Treatment with DAMGO did not have any significant effect on
either beam ((F (2, 21) = 0.60, p >
0.05) or ladder performance (F (2, 21) = 1.56,
p > 0.05).
Figure 2
Effects of intrathecal DAMGO administration on recovery. Subjects were monitored
for 21 days following a moderate contusion SCI. Intrathecal administration of
DAMGO, on day 1 post-injury, did not affect locomotor recovery (A). Similarly,
DAMGO administration did not affect weight gain across the 21-day recovery
period (B).
Sensory function was assessed at the end of the 21-day recovery
period using the tail-flick, von Frey, and girdle tests. DAMGO did not have
a significant effect on thermal reactivity (F (2, 21) =
0.57, p > 0.05), motor (F (2, 21) =
2.51, p > 0.05) or vocal reactivity
(F (2, 21) = 1.87, p > 0.05) to
a mechanical stimulus applied to the hind paws. An ANOVA, however, uncovered
a main effect of drug dose on the girdle test (F (2, 21) =
4.20, p < 0.05) with the vehicle controls showing
more reactivity to at-level stimulation than either the 0.04 μmol or
0.32 μmol groups. This difference, however, was based on a comparison
of 1.7% vocalizations by the vehicle controls, to zero vocalizations by the
0.04 and 0.32 μmol groups, and thus may not be functionally
significant.During the recovery period, weight was also monitored as an index of
general health. To control for the variability observed in starting weight
within each group, a difference score was calculated by subtracting the
starting weight (weight at the day of surgery) from daily weight across
recovery. As shown in Figure 2B all
subjects exhibited weight loss over the first week, and then slowly regained
weight over the subsequent weeks. The drug treatment, however, did not
affect weight at any of the doses tested (F (2, 21) = 0.16,
p > 0.05). Mean weight loss across recovery for
subjects treated with vehicle was 28.90 ± 1.72 grams, 32.04 ±
2.14 grams for the 0.04 μmol group, and 30.25 ± 1.90 grams for
the 0.32 μmol group.In addition to weight, we also recorded mortalities, autophagia,
spastic hypertonia, and recovery of bladder control to assess general
health. In this experiment, there were no mortalities or spastic hypertonia
observed in any of the treatment groups. Further, only one subject (0.32
μmol group) showed signs of autophagia, and one recovered bladder
function (vehicle group) across the entire experiment.
Experiment 2B. Effects of GR89696 on recovery following SCI
In contrast to DAMGO, administration of GR89696 in the acute phase
of SCI undermined recovery of locomotor function at all doses tested (Figure 3A, B). Locomotor scores collected
before treatment on day 1 did not differ across groups (F
(2, 21) = 0.40, p > 0.05). Mean BBB scores ranged
from 1.38 ± 0.26 for the 0.04 μmol group to 1.94 ± 0.57
for the 0.01 μmol group. There was also no main effect of drug
treatment (F (3, 27) = 2.00, p >
0.05) on locomotor recovery. However, using day 1 scores as a covariate, an
ANCOVA revealed that there was a significant interaction between drug dose
and BBB scores across the 21 day recovery period (F (33,
297) = 1.86, p <0. 05). An ANOVA comparing locomotor
function from Days 13-21, when locomotor performances had stabilized,
revealed a main effect of dose on locomotor function (F (3,
28) = 3.01, p <0. 05). As can be seen in Figure 3B, subjects treated with GR89696,
irrespective of dose, displayed significantly lower levels of locomotor
recovery relative to vehicle-treated controls (p <
0.05). Vehicle-treated controls also performed better than GR89696-treated
subjects on additional tests of locomotor recovery. As shown in Figure 3, controls walked across the
narrow edge of the tapered beam with more success than experimental subjects
(Figure 3C), and made less errors
when traversing a ladder (Figure 3D).
These differences, however, did not reach statistical significance on either
the beam (F (3, 28) = 2.10, p >
0.05) or ladder walk tests (F (3, 28) = 1.83,
p > 0.05).
Figure 3
Effects of intrathecal GR89696 administration on recovery. Intrathecal
administration of GR89696 significantly undermined the recovery of locomotor
function after SCI, irrespective of the dose administered (A). In comparison to
vehicle-treated controls, subjects that received GR89696 displayed significantly
lower BBB scores on days 13-21 post-injury (B). Vehicle-treated subjects also
outperformed subjects treated with GR89696 in the tapered beam (C) and ladder
(D) tests, although these differences did not reach statistical significance. *
p < 0.05.
At the end of the 21-day recovery period, tests of sensory
reactivity showed that administration of GR89696 did not affect thermal
reactivity (F (3, 28) = 2.77, p >
0.05), motor reactivity to tactile stimulation (F (3, 28) =
2.49, p > 0.05), or at-level allodynia assessed with
the girdle test (F (3, 28) = 0.29, p
> 0.05; data not shown). However, as shown in Figure 4D, ANOVAs uncovered significant differences for
vocal reactivity across doses (F (3, 28) = 2.95,
p < 0.05), with subjects in the 0.01 μmol
group showing decreased reactivity thresholds when compared to subjects in
the 0.32 μmol and control groups.
Figure 4
GR89696 did not affect the long-term recovery of sensory function. At the end of
the 21-day recovery period, there were no group differences in thermal (A) or
girdle (B) reactivity thresholds. Similarly, motor responses to mechanical
stimulation in the von Frey test (C) did not differ across groups. Subjects that
received 0.01 μmol of GR89696, however, showed lower vocal thresholds to
tactile stimulation in comparison to those in the 0.32 μmol and control
groups (D). * p < 0.05.
Weight loss across recovery was unaffected by GR89696 treatment
(F (3, 28) = 1.09, p > 0.05;
data not shown). As normally observed following SCI, all subjects showed
decreased weight early after injury, which was slowly regained over time.
Mean weight loss across recovery for subjects treated with vehicle was 19.60
± 1.60 grams, 23.76 ± 1.90 grams for the 0.01 μmol
group, 25.28 ± 2.04 grams for the 0.04 μmol group, and 29.59
± 1.85 grams for the 0.32 μmol group. There were no
significant effects of drug treatment on recovery of bladder control
F (3, 28) = 0.43, p > 0.05).
Mortality was also unaffected, with only one death recorded in the vehicle
group, and one in the 0.32 μmol group. Only one case of spastic
hypertonia was observed (0.01 μmol group) for the entire experiment.
Finally, although we observed a dose-dependent increase in autophagia, this
was not a statistically significant effect
(χ2= 7.38, p > 0.05).
Experiment 2C. Effects of [+]-morphine on recovery following SCI
Surprisingly, administration of the unnatural [+]- enantiomer of
morphine did not have any significant effects on recovery of locomotor
function (Figure 5A), despite
administering a dose equivalent to the natural [−]- enantiomer of
morphine previously shown to undermine recovery (4, 6). Mean BBB scores
collected before treatment on day 1 were 1.88 ± 0.35 for
vehicle-treated controls and 1.81 ± 0.38 for [+]- morphine-treated
subjects, and did not differ statistically (F (1, 14) =
0.02, p > 0.05). No differences in locomotor
recovery emerged between the groups across the recovery period
(F (1, 14) = 0.20, p > 0.05).
There were also no significant differences between the groups after day 21
on either the beam (F (1, 14) = 1.18, p
> 0.05) or ladder (F (1, 14) = 0.02,
p > 0.05) tests.
Figure 5
Effects of intrathecal [+]- morphine administration on recovery. Treatment with
the unnatural [+]- enantiomer of morphine in the acute phase of SCI did not
affect either long-term recovery of locomotor function (A) or weight (B).
Similarly, treatment with the morphine enantiomer early after the
contusion did not affect sensory reactivity after day 21 post-injury (data
not shown). Subjects that received [+]- morphine did not differ from their
vehicle-treated counterparts on any of the sensory reactivity tests [tail
flick (F (1, 14) = 0.86, p > 0.05),
tactile motor (F (1, 14) = 0.28, p
> 0.05), tactile vocal (F (1, 14) = 1.18,
p > 0.05), and girdle (F (1,
14) = 1.16, p > 0.05)]. Weight loss across recovery
was also unaffected by [+]- morphine treatment (F (1, 14) =
1.24, p > 0.05, Figure
5B). On average, subjects treated with vehicle lost 23.75
± 1.58 grams across recovery, while subjects treated with [+]-
morphine lost 28.55 ± 1.67 grams.Lastly, we did not observe any significant effects of drug treatment
on mortality (a single subject died in the vehicle group). None of the
subjects recovered bladder control, and no spastic hypertonia was recorded
throughout the duration of the experiment. Administration of [+]- morphine
appeared to exacerbate autophagia, with 37.5% of [+]- morphine subjects
demonstrating signs of self-harm, compared to 0% of vehicle-treated
controls. This effect approached, but did not reach statistical significance
(χ2= 3.69, p = 0.055).
Histological Results
Since GR89696 administration had a significant impact on locomotor
recovery, we wanted to see whether the effects were due to decreased tissue
sparing at the injury site. Four measures were analyzed: residual white matter,
residual gray matter, tissue damage, and relative lesion (damage + missing
tissue). There were no effects of drug dose on any of our histological measures
at the center of the lesion (Figure 6).
Similarly, there were no significant effects rostral to the lesion, although a
main effect of drug dose on residual gray matter approached significance
(F (2, 17) = 2.99, p = 0.077). Caudally,
however, we found a significant main effect of dose on residual gray matter
(F (2, 15) = 5.74, p < 0.05).
Post-hoc analyses revealed that subjects in the 0.01 μmol group had
significantly less spared gray matter than subjects treated with vehicle. A main
effect of drug dose also approached, but did not reach, significance for the
measure of tissue damage caudal to the injury site (F (2, 15) =
2.98, p = 0.08). There were no significant effects on residual
white matter at this level of the spinal cord.
Figure 6
Effects of intrathecal GR89696 administration on tissue sparing following SCI.
The dose-dependent effects of GR89696 on lesion size (relative lesion), damage,
residual gray matter, and residual white matter are depicted. A single 0.01
μmol dose of GR89696, administered in the acute phase of SCI,
significantly decreased the amount of spared gray matter caudal to the injury
center in comparison to vehicle-treated controls. *p <
0.05.
Discussion
In accordance with the literature, in this study we showed that following
SCI, DAMGO, the selective agonist for the MOR, produced the most robust analgesia in
tests of thermal and mechanical reactivity. Administration of DPDPE, a DOR-agonist,
only produced modest analgesia, even at the highest doses tested. Surprisingly,
treatment with GR89696, resulted in strong analgesia at higher doses, although
transient agitation was also observed in subjects treated with this KOR-agonist.
Unfortunately, despite its analgesic efficacy, a single dose of GR89696 also
significantly undermined recovery of locomotor function, increased mechanical
reactivity, and decreased gray matter sparing after SCI. In fact, even the lowest
dose of GR89696 replicated the negative side effects associated with morphine
treatment in our previous studies (4, 6)- even at a dose 32 times smaller. These
results indicate increased involvement of the spinal KOR system following injury,
and further underscore the need to re-evaluate the safety of clinically used opioids
for the treatment of pain in the SCI population.Based on the data presented here, we propose that the analgesic efficacy of
intrathecal morphine in the SCI model (4, 6) is mediated by binding to the μ-
and κ-opioid receptors. While studies on opioid receptor distribution in the
spinal cord support the significant contribution of the MOR to the antinociceptive
effects of morphine (36, 37), the results of selective activation of the
KOR were unexpected. Studies have long disputed the role of the KOR in spinal
analgesia. For example, in a study by Leighton and colleagues (38), intrathecal administration of three different KOR agonists
(PD1 17302, U50488, U69593) failed to increase antinociception to noxious mechanical
and thermal stimuli, even at doses up to 100 μg. Others have suggested that
KOR-mediated analgesia is intensity- and stimulus-dependent, with intrathecally
applied KOR ligands showing potency on tests of chemical-visceral pain but not
cutaneous-thermal or electrical sensory input (39-41). Furthermore, intrathecal
administration of exogenous and endogenous KOR ligands has also been associated with
paralysis and flaccidity of the tail and hind limbs, effects which complicate the
interpretation of analgesic tests requiring a motor response (38, 42). In contrast to
these studies, however, others have shown that KOR agonists can produce significant
spinal analgesia (43, 44). Indeed using knockout mice, Yamada et al. (45) found that intrathecal administration of
morphine produced analgesia in the absence of MORs by acting through spinal KORs. In
our studies the KOR agonist, GR89696, exhibited an analgesic profile comparable to
morphine and the selective MOR agonist, DAMGO. Acute intrathecal administration of
GR89696 increased subjects’ thermal and mechanical thresholds. Furthermore,
we verified that the decreased motor responses in these tests were not simply due to
paralysis by recording vocal responses to stimulation. Subjects treated with GR89696
displayed increased vocal response thresholds with mechanical stimulation,
indicative of analgesia. Overall, these findings point to an important role for the
spinal KOR system in intrinsic pain modulation after SCI.It is possible that distinct KOR subtypes mediate analgesia at the level of
the spinal cord. Indeed, evidence for further classifying the KOR into subtypes 1,
2, and 3 has emerged from binding and pharmacological studies (46). Molecular evidence, however, does not support these
subdivisions. For instance, only one KOR gene has been identified, which eliminates
all KOR activity upon genetic knockout (46).
Instead of receptor subtypes, the different pharmacological profiles could be driven
by other factors, including alternative gene splicing, post-translational
modifications, receptor dimerization, and the activation of diverse effector
proteins (47). From a behavioral standpoint,
however, this does not negate the importance of different
pharmacologically-identified receptor subtypes, especially in the area of pain
research. For instance, opioid compounds thought to bind to different KOR subtypes
show distinct analgesic profiles. In comparison to KOR subtype 1 (KOR1) agonists,
intrathecal administration of KOR subtype 2 (KOR2) agonists are more effective
anti-hyperalgesic agents in inflammatory models (48). Intrathecal oxycodone also results in antinociceptive effects
following nerve injury and has been proposed to act as a KOR2 agonist (49). This coincides with our findings with
GR89696, which is thought to be a selective ligand for KOR2. Furthermore, these
studies also point to an interaction between injury and KOR2 function.In addition, in our study, the analgesic efficacy of intrathecal GR89696
could also reflect changes in KOR expression following injury. We know that in the
spinal cord, KOR density is not set, but fluctuates in response to a variety of
factors. For example, spinal KOR levels vary across the estrous cycle in rats,
decreasing during diestrus (50). Alterations
have also been reported following inflammation or peripheral nerve injury (51-53).
The spinal KOR system also appears to undergo modifications after SCI. Studies have
shown that immunoreactivity of endogenous KOR ligands increases progressively with
injury severity in the spinal cord following trauma (54). Further, using [3H]ethylketocyclazocine, Krumins et al.
(55) showed significantly increased
binding at the site of a spinal cord injury that was evident as early as two hours
post-SCI and up to 7 days. This upregulation of KOR expression and binding may
affect locomotor function. Indeed, dynorphin alone has been shown to induce
paraplegia in animals, even when administered to the intact spinal cord (15, 42).
These findings, combined with the results presented here, implicate the KOR system
in the pathophysiology of SCI.We hypothesize that upregulated KOR expression following SCI may exacerbate
secondary injury processes. While increased KOR expression on presynaptic terminals
and neurons of the dorsal horn may be responsible for greater KOR-mediated analgesia
after SCI, increased KOR expression on glial cells may be related to the adverse
long-term effects on locomotor and sensory recovery. For example, Xu et al. (56) have shown that KOR activation contributes
to astrocyte proliferation after a partial sciatic nerve ligation. In this study,
dynorphin knock-out mice, mice with a homozygous KOR deletion, and mice treated with
a specific KOR antagonist (norBNI) failed to show astrocyte proliferation in the
dorsal horn of the spinal cord. Conversely, cultured mouse spinal astrocytes treated
with the selective KOR agonist U50,488 showed increased proliferation, and increased
phosphor-p38 MAPK-immunoreactivity. Both of these effects were blocked by
administration of either norBNI or the p38 MAPK inhibitor SB 203580, suggesting that
the effects of the KOR may be mediated through this signaling pathway. Importantly,
intrathecal injections of SB 203580 for 7 days after partial sciatic nerve ligation
reduced spinal astrocyte proliferation in vivo, an effect that
correlated with decreased signs of neuropathic pain, such as allodynia and
hyperalgesia (56). These findings suggest
that in the context of SCI, morphine administration could exacerbate glial
reactivity by binding to KORs on these cells.Indeed, extensive in vitro and in vivo
evidence suggests that opioid administration results in the activation of glial
cells and the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines (24, 25, 57-60). For instance,
lumbar dorsal spinal cord sections show significant increases in the release of
IL-1β, IL-6, fractalkine, GRO/KC, MIP-1α, MCP-1 and TNF-α
following 180 minutes of incubation with 100 μM morphine compared to media
alone (24). Similarly, in
vivo, increases in IL-1α, IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α
have been demonstrated after 7 days of intrathecal morphine (24). We have also previously shown that in the SCI model,
morphine administration results in increased expression of the pro-inflammatory
cytokines IL-1β and IL-6 at the injury site (4). Although we originally suggested that these effects may result from
morphine binding to non-classic opioid receptors, it is possible that this could
also be due to activation of KORs on glial cells. Functionally, this could
substantially increase the already highly inflammatory environment, leading to
excitotoxic cell death, a possibility that could explain our histological results.
Furthermore, glial activation at the level of the spinal cord might also contribute
to central sensitization, a mechanism thought to underlie pathological pain (61).Lastly, although not assessed in the current study, the NMDA receptor may
also play a role in the morphine-induced attenuation of functional recovery. An
interaction between opioids and NMDA receptors in the pathophysiology of spinal cord
injury has been previously described in the literature. In fact, the detrimental
effects of the endogenous opioid dynorphin appear to be mediated by both KORs and
NMDA receptors (62-64). Chronic morphine administration is also associated with
neuronal apoptosis, potentially through an NMDA-regulated pathway. Mao et al. (13), for example, found increased protein
expression of caspase-3 and Bax pro-apoptotic elements, accompanied by a decrease of
the anti-apoptotic Bcl-2 protein, in the dorsal horn of rats after prolonged
morphine treatment. Notably, neuronal apoptosis was blocked by administration of
MK-801, an NMDA receptor antagonist. This, combined with the downregulation of
spinal glutamate transporters observed after chronic morphine administration (12) further suggests that increased cell loss
may be the result of the highly toxic excitatory environment. In our model, using
MK-801 as an adjuvant to intrathecal morphine may protect against the long-term
adverse effects on recovery of function, and should be further investigated.In conclusion, we have shown that activation of the KOR with GR89696 is
sufficient to undermine locomotor recovery after SCI. By
contrast, neither DAMGO nor [+]- morphine affected recovery. Based on these data, we
hypothesize that the adverse effects of morphine on recovery of locomotor function
are mediated by the KOR system. Now, given that frequently prescribed analgesics
like oxycodone act through the KOR receptor system, it is paramount that we identify
the mechanisms mediating the adverse effects of KOR activation after SCI. Indeed our
data demonstrate that even very low doses of KOR ligands may undermine recovery; as
shown by the attenuation of function observed at a dose 32-fold lower than an
effective dose of morphine. Lastly, the role of the MOR and non-classic opioid
receptors should not be discounted. Although we did not observe any effects of DAMGO
or [+]- morphine after a single administration, it is possible that detrimental
effects may emerge with prolonged administration (65). Ultimately, elucidating the molecular mechanisms underlying the
effects of morphine, and other opioids, is imperative in order to develop
pharmacological interventions that are both safe and efficacious in a clinical
setting.
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