Literature DB >> 33705801

Role of β-arrestin-2 in short- and long-term opioid tolerance in the dorsal root ganglia.

Karan H Muchhala1, Joanna C Jacob1, William L Dewey1, Hamid I Akbarali2.   

Abstract

G-protein-biased agonists with reduced β-arrestin-2 activation are being investigated as safer alternatives to clinically-used opioids. β-arrestin-2 has been implicated in the mechanism of opioid-induced antinociceptive tolerance. Opioid-induced analgesic tolerance is classically considered as centrally-mediated, but recent reports implicate nociceptive dorsal root ganglia neurons as critical mediators in this process. Here, we investigated the role of β-arrestin-2 in the mechanism of opioid tolerance in dorsal root ganglia nociceptive neurons using β-arrestin-2 knockout mice and the G-protein-biased μ-opioid receptor agonist, TRV130. Whole-cell current-clamp electrophysiology experiments revealed that 15-18-h overnight exposure to 10 μM morphine in vitro induced acute tolerance in β-arrestin-2 wild-type but not knockout neurons. Furthermore, in wild-type neurons circumventing β-arrestin-2 activation by overnight treatment with 200 nM TRV130 attenuated tolerance. Similarly, acute morphine tolerance in vivo in β-arrestin-2 knockout mice was prevented in the warm-water tail-withdrawal assay. Treatment with 30 mg/kg TRV130 s.c. also inhibited acute antinociceptive tolerance in vivo in wild-type mice. Alternately, in β-arrestin-2 knockout neurons tolerance induced by 7-day in vivo exposure to 50 mg morphine pellet was conserved. Likewise, β-arrestin-2 deletion did not mitigate in vivo antinociceptive tolerance induced by 7-day exposure to 25 mg or 50 mg morphine pellet in both female or male mice, respectively. Consequently, these results indicated that β-arrestin-2 mediates acute but not chronic opioid tolerance in dorsal root ganglia neurons and to antinociception in vivo. This suggests that opioid-induced antinociceptive tolerance may develop even in the absence of β-arrestin-2 activation, and thus significantly affect the clinical utility of biased agonists.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Analgesic tolerance; Antinociception; Biased agonism; Morphine; Mu-opioid receptor; TRV130

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33705801      PMCID: PMC8058323          DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Pharmacol        ISSN: 0014-2999            Impact factor:   4.432


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