Psychopharmacology 1998-11-01

The mu opioid irreversible antagonist beta-funaltrexamine differentiates the discriminative stimulus effects of opioids with high and low efficacy at the mu opioid receptor.

D Morgan, M J Picker

Index: Psychopharmacology 140 , 20, (1998)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to determine the relative intrinsic efficacy of various opioids using the irreversible mu opioid antagonist beta-funaltrexamine (betaFNA). To this end, pigeons were trained to discriminate 3.0 (n=6) or 1.8 (n=1) mg/kg morphine from distilled water in a two-key, food-reinforced, drug discrimination procedure. The mu opioids fentanyl, l-methadone, buprenorphine, butorphanol, nalorphine, nalbuphine and levallorphan, as well as the delta opioid BW373U86, substituted completely for the morphine stimulus. The stimulus effects of morphine were antagonized (i.e., produced a significant increase in the ED50 value) by a 10 mg/kg but not a 5 mg/kg dose of betaFNA. Antagonist effects of betaFNA were observed following a 2-h pretreatment, but not following 26-, 50-, 74-, 98- or 146-h pretreatments. The stimulus effects produced by fentanyl, l-methadone and buprenorphine were not antagonized by doses of betaFNA as high as 20, 10 and 10 mg/kg, respectively. The lowest dose of betaFNA required to antagonize the stimulus effects of butorphanol was 10 mg/kg, whereas the effects of nalorphine, nalbuphine and levallorphan were antagonized by a dose of betaFNA as low as 5 mg/kg. The delta BW373U86 substituted for the morphine stimulus, and this effect was not antagonized by 10 mg/kg betaFNA. The pkB values for naloxone (1.0 mg/kg) against the stimulus effects of fentanyl (6.70) and morphine (6.52) were considerably higher than that for BW373U86 (4.60), indicating further that the morphine-like stimulus effects produced by BW373U86 were not mediated by activity at the mu opioid receptor. These findings indicate that the strategy of irreversible antagonism can be used effectively to differentiate opioids with varying degrees of intrinsic efficacy at the mu opioid receptor in a pigeon drug discrimination procedure. In particular, the ranking of these drugs by relative intrinsic efficacy at the mu opioid receptor is: l-methadone=fentanyl> or =buprenorphine> or =morphine> or =butorphanol>nalorphine=nalbuphine=levallorphan. Additionally, the short-acting effect of betaFNA in the pigeon suggests that the recovery of mu opioid receptor function varies across species.


Related Compounds

  • nalorphine hydroch...
  • levallorphan hydro...

Related Articles:

Analysis of naltrexone and its metabolite 6-beta-naltrexol in serum with high-performance liquid chromatography.

2012-01-01

[BMC Res. Notes 5 , 439, (2012)]

GC-MS confirmation of codeine, morphine, 6-acetylmorphine, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, oxycodone, and oxymorphone in urine.

1999-01-01

[J. Anal. Toxicol. 23(3) , 177-86, (1999)]

Comparison of stably expressed rat UGT1.1 and UGT2B1 in the glucuronidation of opioid compounds.

1997-02-01

[Drug Metab. Dispos. 25(2) , 251-5, (1997)]

The glucuronidation of exogenous and endogenous compounds by stably expressed rat and human UDP-glucuronosyltransferase 1.1.

1996-08-01

[Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 332(1) , 92-100, (1996)]

Social and environmental enrichment enhances sensitivity to the effects of kappa opioids: studies on antinociception, diuresis and conditioned place preference.

2003-08-01

[Pharmacol. Biochem. Behav. 76(1) , 93-101, (2003)]

More Articles...