Opioidergic control of the spinal release of neuropeptides. Possible significance for the analgesic effects of opioids
- PMID: 7851837
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1472-8206.1994.tb00809.x
Opioidergic control of the spinal release of neuropeptides. Possible significance for the analgesic effects of opioids
Abstract
Several neuropeptides play a key role in the transfer (substance P, calcitonin gene-related peptide, etc) and control (enkephalins, cholecystokinin, etc) of nociceptive messages from primary afferent fibres to spino-thalamic neurones in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. This first relay in nociceptive pathways has been shown to be a major target for opioids such as analgesic drugs, and the effects of exogenous (mainly morphine) and endogenous opioids on the release of neuropeptides within the dorsal horn are reviewed here for a better understanding of the cellular mechanisms responsible for their antinociceptive action. Complex modulations of the in vitro (from tissue slices) and in vivo (in halothane-anaesthetized rats whose intrathecal space was perfused with an artificial cerebrospinal fluid) release of substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide by opioids have been reported, depending on the opioid receptor (mu, delta, kappa, and their subtypes) stimulated by these compounds. In particular, the inhibition by delta agonists of substance P release from primary afferent fibres, and that by the concomitant stimulation of mu and kappa receptors of the release of calcitonin gene-related peptide are very probably involved in the analgesic action of specific opioids and morphine at the level of the spinal cord. Furthermore, the negative modulation (through presynaptic opioid autoreceptors) by delta and mu agonists of the spinal release of met-enkephalin, and the complex inhibitory/excitatory influence of delta, mu and kappa receptor ligands on the release of cholecystokinin within the dorsal horn very likely also contribute to the antinociceptive action of these drugs and morphine. The reviewed data strongly support the existence of functional interactions between mu and kappa receptors within the spinal cord, and their key role in the analgesic action of non specific opiates (acting on mu, delta and kappa receptors) such as morphine.
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