4.5 Article

Restraint Stress Potentiated Morphine Sensitization: Involvement of Dopamine Receptors within the Nucleus Accumbens

Journal

NEUROCHEMICAL RESEARCH
Volume 46, Issue 3, Pages 648-659

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11064-020-03199-5

Keywords

Stress; Sensitization; D1-like dopamine receptor; D2-like dopamine receptor; Nucleus accumbens; Morphine; Tail-flick test; Rat

Funding

  1. Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences [98-21484-1398/12/20]

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Injecting D1/D2-like dopamine receptor antagonists directly into the NAc of rats can block the sensitization of morphine antinociceptive effects induced by restraint stress. This indicates the crucial role of accumbal dopamine receptors in morphine sensitization caused by co-administration of stress and morphine.
Sensitization to psychostimulant drugs, as well as morphine, subjected to cross-sensitization with stress. The development of morphine sensitization is associated with enhancements in dopamine overflow in the Nucleus accumbens (NAc). This study aimed to examine the role of accumbal D1/D2-like dopamine receptors in restraint stress (RS) induced sensitization to morphine antinociceptive effects. Adult male Wistar rats weighing 220-250 g underwent stereotaxic surgery. Two stainless steel guide cannulae were bilaterally implanted, 1 mm above the NAc injection site. Different solutions of SCH-23390, as a D1-like receptor antagonist or sulpiride, as a D2-like receptor antagonist, were microinjected into the NAc five min before exposure to RS. Restraint stress lasted for 3 h, 10 min after RS termination; animals received a subcutaneous injection of morphine (1 mg/kg) for 3 consecutive days. The procedure was followed by a 5-day drug and/or stress-free period. After that, on the 9th day, the nociceptive response was evaluated by the tail-flick test. The results revealed that intra-NAc administration of D1/D2-like dopamine receptor antagonists, SCH-23390 or sulpiride, respectively, blocked morphine sensitization-induced by RS and morphine co-administration in rats for three consecutive days. This work provides new insight into the determinant role of accumbal dopamine receptors in morphine sensitization produced by RS-morphine co-administration.

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