1. Endogenous nociceptin signaling and stress-induced analgesia
- Author
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Anna Rizzi, Domenico Regoli, Jeffrey S. Mogil, Raffaella Bigoni, Remo Guerrini, Girolamo Calo, Severo Salvadori, and Giuliano Marzola
- Subjects
Central Nervous System ,Male ,Pain Threshold ,medicine.medical_specialty ,[Nphe ,medicine.drug_class ,receptor ,Narcotic Antagonists ,Pain ,Neuropeptide ,(+)-Naloxone ,Nociceptin Receptor ,]NC(1-13)NH ,Mice ,Stress, Physiological ,Internal medicine ,Mouse tail-withdrawal assay (TW) ,Reaction Time ,medicine ,Animals ,Drug Interactions ,Receptor ,Swimming ,Pain Measurement ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Antagonist ,Nociceptin/orphanin FQ (NC) ,Receptor antagonist ,Peptide Fragments ,OP ,Nociceptin receptor ,Nociception ,Endocrinology ,Swim stress-induced analgesia (SIA) ,Opioid Peptides ,Opioid ,4 ,1 ,2 ,Receptors, Opioid ,Analgesia ,Signal Transduction ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Nociceptin/orphanin FQ (NC) and its receptor (OP4) have been implicated in pain transmission. The aim of the present study was to investigate the role of the NC/OP4 system in stress-induced analgesia (SIA). The tail-withdrawal assay was performed in mice stressed by forced swimming in water at 15 degrees C (high severity swims) or 32 degrees C (low severity swims). High severity swims produced a naloxone-insensitive antinociceptive effect which was blocked by supraspinal NC (1 nmol). The selective OP4 receptor antagonist, [Nphe1]NC(-13)NH2 (30 nmol), was inactive by itself, but prevented the effect of NC. Low severity swims produced a milder analgesic effect that was partially antagonized by naloxone, completely blocked by NC and potentiated by [Nphe1]NC(-13)NH2. These findings confirm the anti-analgesic role of supraspinal NC and suggest that endogenous NC signaling counteracts the opioid component of SIA.
- Published
- 2001
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