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Dexamethasone mimics the inhibitory effect of chronic pain on the development of tolerance to morphine analgesia and compensates for morphine induced changes in G proteins gene expression

Authors :
Javan, Mohammad
Kazemi, Bahram
Ahmadiani, Abolhassan
Motamedi, Fereshteh
Source :
Brain Research. Aug2006, Vol. 1104 Issue 1, p73-79. 7p.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Abstract: It is previously reported that the HPA axis plays role in the inhibitory effect of pain on tolerance development to analgesic effect of opioids. The present study was designed to investigate whether the chronic co-administration of dexamethasone as a glucocorticoid is also able to prevent or reverse analgesic tolerance to morphine and to compare the expression of Gαi/o and Gβ subunits of G proteins in the context of chronic dexamethasone, development of morphine tolerance and their combination. Analgesic tolerance to morphine was induced by chronic intraperitoneally (i.p.) administration of morphine 20 mg/kg to male Wistar rats weighing 200–240 g within 4 consecutive days and analgesia was assessed using tail-flick test. Chronic dexamethasone was applied using 4 daily i.p. injections. Lumbar spinal tissues were assayed for the expression of Gαi/o and Gβ proteins using “semiquantitative PCR” normalized to beta-actin gene expression. Results showed that chronic administration of dexamethasone could reduce and reverse the development of tolerance in rats that received chronic i.p. injections of morphine. Chronic administration of dexamethasone significantly increased the expression of Gαi/o, while chronic administration of morphine did not change its expression. The expression of Gβ, however, was increased after the chronic administration of morphine, but did not change after the administration of chronic dexamethasone. None of these increases were observed when morphine and dexamethasone were co-administered. We conclude that the development of tolerance to analgesic effect of morphine could be prevented and reversed by dexamethasone co-administration. The increase in Gαi/o genes expression produced by chronic dexamethasone may facilitate the opioid signaling pathway and compensate for morphine-induced tolerance. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00068993
Volume :
1104
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Brain Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
21829156
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2006.05.088