Unbound MEDLINE

The effects of repeated opioid administration on locomotor activity: II. Unidirectional Cross-sensitization to cocaine. The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics [J Pharmacol Exp Ther] Journal article

 
TitleThe effects of repeated opioid administration on locomotor activity: II. Unidirectional Cross-sensitization to cocaine.
Author(s)Smith MA, Greene-Naples JL, Felder JN, Iordanou JC, Lyle MA, Walker KL 
InstitutionDavidson College.
SourceJ Pharmacol Exp Ther 2009 Apr 29.
AbstractSensitization refers to an increase in sensitivity to the effects of a drug and is believed to play a role in the etiology of substance use disorders. Cross-sensitization has been observed between drugs from different pharmacological classes and may play a role in the escalation of drug use in polydrug-abusing populations. The purpose of this study was to examine cross-sensitization between opioids and cocaine, and to determine the extent to which cross-sensitization is mediated by an opioid's selectivity for mu, kappa, and delta receptors. Separate groups of rats were treated with opioid receptor agonists and antagonists every other day for 10 days, and the locomotor effects of cocaine were tested 8 days later. The mu agonists morphine and buprenorphine, and the delta agonist BW373U86, produced cross-sensitization to cocaine, such that repeated administration of these drugs over a 10-day period significantly enhanced cocaine's locomotor effects when tested later. Co-administration of the opioid antagonist naltrexone prevented morphine and buprenorphine from producing cross-sensitization. Co-administration of naltrexone, but not the delta antagonist naltrindole, also prevented BW373U86 from producing cross-sensitization. The kappa agonist spiradoline failed to produce cross-sensitization, but co-administration of spiradoline prevented morphine and buprenorphine from producing cross-sensitization. Spiradoline's ability to block cross-sensitization was itself blocked by the kappa antagonist nor-binaltorphimine. The mixed mu/kappa opioids butorphanol, nalbuphine, and nalorphine did not produce cross-sensitization under any condition examined. These data indicate that agonist activity at mu receptors positively modulates cross-sensitization between opioids and cocaine, whereas agonist activity at kappa receptors negatively modulates this effect.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID19403852
  
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