4.7 Article

Naloxone-precipitated morphine withdrawal behavior and brain IL-1β expression: Comparison of different mouse strains

Journal

BRAIN BEHAVIOR AND IMMUNITY
Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 1223-1232

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2011.03.016

Keywords

Morphine; Glia; Interleukin-1 beta; Toll-like receptor 4; MyD88; Tolerance; Withdrawal; Mice strain differences

Funding

  1. University of Adelaide
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council [ID 465423]
  3. University of Adelaide Faculty of Health Science
  4. NIH [DA015642, DA017670, DA024044, DE017782]
  5. NHMRC

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The development of opioid dependence involves classical neuronal opioid receptor activation and is due in part to engagement of glia causing a proinfiammatory response. Such opioid-induced glial activation occurs, at least in part, through a non-classical opioid mechanism involving Toll-like-receptor 4 (TLR4). Among the immune factors released following the opioid-glia-TLR4 interaction, interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) plays a prominent role. Previous animal behavioral studies have demonstrated significant heterogeneity of chronic morphine-induced tolerance and dependence between different mouse strains. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the heterogeneity of chronic opioid-induced IL-1 beta expression contributes to differences in opioid tolerance and withdrawal behaviors. Chronic morphine-induced tolerance and dependence were assessed in 3 inbred wild-type mouse strains (Balb/c, CBA, and C57BL/6) and 2 knockout strains (TLR4 and MyD88). Analysis of brain nuclei (medial prefrontal cortex, cortex, brain stem, hippocampus, and midbrain and diencephalon regions combined) revealed that, of inbred wild-type mice, there are significant main effects of morphine treatment on IL-1 beta expression in the brain regions analyzed (p < 0.02 for all regions analyzed). A significant increase in hippocampal IL-1 beta expression was found in C57BL/6 mice after morphine treatment, whilst, a significant decrease was found in the mPFC region of wild-type Balb/c mice. Furthermore, the results of wild-type inbred strains demonstrated that the elevated hippocampal IL-1 beta expression is associated with withdrawal jumping behavior. Interestingly, knockout of TLR4, but not MyD88 protected against the development of analgesic tolerance. Gene sequence differences of IL - 1 beta and TLR4 genes alone did not explain the heterogeneity of dependence behavior between mouse strains. Together, these data further support the involvement of opioid-induced CNS immune signaling in dependence development. Moreover, this study demonstrated the advantages of utilizing multiple mouse strains and indicates that appropriate choice of mouse strains could enhance future research outcomes. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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