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Vol. 58, Issue 5, 1011-1016, November 2000
Department of Pharmacology, University of Colorado Health Sciences
Center, Denver, Colorado
ABSTRACT
The mechanisms by which morphine-induced analgesia and tolerance and
physical dependence on morphine arise have been the subject of intense
study, and much work has pointed to the involvement of cAMP-mediated
events in the neuroadaptive phenomena leading to morphine tolerance
and/or dependence. We overexpressed an opioid receptor-stimulatable
form of adenylyl cyclase (type 7) in the central nervous system of mice
and demonstrated significant effects of this manipulation on the
animals' acute response to morphine, the development of morphine
tolerance, and development of sensitization to morphine. Measurements
of the acute analgesic response to morphine demonstrated that the
ED50 values for the transgenic mice were significantly
lower than the ED50 values determined for the
"wild-type" animals. During chronic treatment with morphine, the
transgenic mice developed tolerance more rapidly than the wild-type
mice, and transgenic animals of the C57BL/6xSJL background
showed a larger sensitization to morphine's effects on locomotor
activity than did wild-type mice of the same background. These results indicated that cAMP-generating systems may simultaneously modulate the
development of tolerance and sensitization. Interestingly, the signs of
physical dependence on morphine in the transgenic mice did not differ
from those in their wild-type litter mates, indicating that separate
mechanisms may modulate opiate tolerance and opiate dependence.
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