4.6 Article

Morphine induces dysfunction of PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy in spinal cord neurons implying involvement in antinociceptive tolerance

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages 1056-1068

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jmcb/mjz002

Keywords

mitophagy; PINK1; Parkin; ROS; SQSTM1/p62; morphine tolerance

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81870870, 81202513, 81471142]
  2. Natural Science Foundation for Young Scientists of Jiangsu Province [BK20161033]
  3. Key Project of Nanjing Medical University Science and Technology Innovation Foundation [2017NJMUCX004]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The development of opioid-induced analgesic tolerance is a clinical challenge in long-term use for managing chronic pain. The mechanisms of morphine tolerance are poorly understood. Mitochondria-derived reactive oxygen species (ROS) is a crucial signal inducing analgesic tolerance and pain. Chronic administration of morphine leads to robust ROS production and accumulation of damaged mitochondria, which are immediately removed by mitophagy. Here, we show that morphine inhibits mitochondria damage-induced accumulation of PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 (PINK1) in neurons. It interrupts the recruitment of Parkin to the impaired mitochondria and inhibits the ubiquitination of mitochondrial proteins catalyzed by Parkin. Consequently, morphine suppresses the recognition of autophagosomes to the damaged mitochondria mediated by LC3 and sequestosome-1 (SQSTM1/p62). Thus, morphine inhibits autophagy flux and leads to the accumulation of SQSTM1/p62. Finally, the impaired mitochondria cannot be delivered to lysosomes for degradation and ultimately induces robust ROS production and morphine tolerance. Our findings suggest that the dysfunction of mitophagy is involved in morphine tolerance. The deficiency of PINK1/Parkin-mediated clearance of damaged mitochondria is crucial for the generation of excessive ROS and important to the development of analgesic tolerance. These findings suggest that the compounds capable of stabilizing PINK1 or restoring mitophagy may be utilized to prevent or reduce opioid tolerance during chronic pain management.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available