Mu and delta opioid receptors play opposite nociceptive and behavioural roles on nerve‐injured mice

Background and Purpose Mu and delta opioid receptors(MOP, DOP) contribution to the manifestations of pathological pain is not understood. We used genetic approaches to investigate the opioid mechanisms modulating neuropathic pain and its comorbid manifestations. Experimental Approach We generated co...

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Published inBritish journal of pharmacology Vol. 177; no. 5; pp. 1187 - 1205
Main Authors Martínez‐Navarro, Miriam, Cabañero, David, Wawrzczak‐Bargiela, Agnieszka, Robe, Anne, Gavériaux‐Ruff, Claire, Kieffer, Brigitte L., Przewlocki, Ryszard, Baños, Josep E., Maldonado, Rafael
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.03.2020
Wiley
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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Summary:Background and Purpose Mu and delta opioid receptors(MOP, DOP) contribution to the manifestations of pathological pain is not understood. We used genetic approaches to investigate the opioid mechanisms modulating neuropathic pain and its comorbid manifestations. Experimental Approach We generated conditional knockout mice with MOP or DOP deletion in sensoryNav1.8‐positive neurons (Nav1.8), in GABAergic forebrain neurons (DLX5/6) orconstitutively (CMV). Mutant mice and wild‐type littermates were subjected topartial sciatic nerve ligation (PSNL) or sham surgery and their nociception wascompared. Anxiety‐, depressivelike behaviour and cognitive performance were also measured. Opioid receptor mRNA expression, microgliosis and astrocytosis were assessed in the dorsalroot ganglia (DRG) and/or the spinal cord (SC). Key Results Constitutive CMV‐MOP knockouts after PSNL displayed reduced mechanical allodynia and enhanced heat hyperalgesia. This phenotype was accompanied by increased DOP expression in DRG and SC, and reduced microgliosis and astrocytosis in deep dorsal horn laminae. Conditional MOP knockouts and control mice developed similar hypersensitivity after PSNL, except for anenhanced heat hyperalgesia by DLX5/6‐MOP male mice. Neuropathic pain‐induced anxiety was aggravated in CMV‐MOP and DLX5/6‐MOP knockouts. Nerve‐injured CMV‐DOP mice showed increased mechanical allodynia, whereas Nav1.8‐DOP and DLX5/8‐DOP mice had partial nociceptive enhancement. CMV‐DOP and DLX5/6‐DOP mutants showed increased depressive‐like behaviour after PSNL. Conclusions and Implications MOP activity after nerve injury increased anxiety‐like responses involving forebrain GABAergic neurons and enhanced mechanical pain sensitivity along with repression of DOP expression and spinal cord gliosis. In contrast, DOP shows a protective function limiting nociceptive and affective manifestations of neuropathic pain.
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PMCID: PMC7042108
ISSN:0007-1188
1476-5381
DOI:10.1111/bph.14911