Journal of Pain Research (Nov 2018)

Activation of spinal nociceptin receptors induces cardiovascular depression and antinociception in an independent manner in mice

  • Tsai CY,
  • Poon YY,
  • Huang YH,
  • Chan SH

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 11
pp. 2699 – 2708

Abstract

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Ching-Yi Tsai,1,* Yan-Yuen Poon,1,2,* Ya-Hui Huang,1 Samuel HH Chan1 1Institute for Translational Research in Biomedicine, Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Kaohsiung, Taiwan; 2Department of Anesthesiology, Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Kaohsiung, Taiwan *These authors contributed equally to this work Purpose: The nociceptin receptor (NOP) was discovered in 1994 and was designated opioid-like receptor; activation of NOP leads to reduced neuronal excitability. Although suggested by the anatomical localization of NOP in brain or spinal cord, the cardiovascular or nociceptive effects of its endogenous ligand, nociceptin, are equivocal. Taking advantage from intrathecal application of nociceptin to simultaneously activate NOP on sympathetic preganglionic neurons in the intermediolateral column (IML) and superficial laminae of dorsal horn, we investigated whether the nociceptin-induced cardiovascular effects engage the participation of baroreflex, and whether the concurrently elicited changes in blood pressure and pain responses are interrelated.Methods: NOPs in the thoracic spinal cord of ICR or C57BL/6 mice were identified with immunofluorescence staining and were activated through intrathecal administration of nocicetpin. The elicited changes in cardiovascular parameters and tail-flick nociceptive responses were measured.Results: Positive immunoreactivity against NOP colocalized with neurons in the IML and superficial dorsal horn layers of thoracic spinal cord. Intrathecal administration of nociceptin (1, 2, or 5 nmol) elicited a significant and dose-dependent decrease in blood pressure or heart rate that was paralleled by reduced baroreflex-mediated sympathetic vasomotor tone and mirrored by augmented cardiac vagal baroreflex, alongside prolonged tail-flick latency with an efficacy of hypotension <<< antinociception. Coadministration of the specific NOP antagonist, UFP101 (10 nmol), blunted all nociceptin-elicited responses. However, restoring blood pressure to baseline level failed to affect the antinociceptive actions of nociceptin.Conclusion: Activation of thoracic spinal NOP in ICR and C57BL/6 mice induces blood pressure and heart rate by decreasing the sympathetic outflow of both arms of the baroreflex arc to the blood vessels and the heart, and the antinociceptive responses to nociceptin are independent of and disproportional to its cardiovascular actions. Keywords: nociceptin, intermediolateral column, superficial layers of dorsal horn, tail-flick test, baroreflex-mediated sympathetic vasomotor tone, cardiac vagal baroreflex

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