Effects of Kappa Opioid Receptor-Selective Agonists on Responses of Pelvic Nerve Afferents to Noxious Colorectal Distension
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 78 (2) , 1003-1012
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.1997.78.2.1003
Abstract
Su, X., J. N. Sengupta, and G. F. Gebhart. Effects of kappa opiois receptor-selective agonists on responses of pelvic nerve afferents to noxious colorectal distension. J. Neurophysiol. 78: 1003–1012, 1997. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of κ-opioid receptor selective agonists on responses of mechanosensitive afferent fibers in the pelvic nerve. Single-fiber recordings were made from pelvic nerve afferents in the decentralized S1 dorsal root of the rat. A total of 572 afferent fibers in the S1 dorsal root were identified by electrical stimulation of the pelvic nerve; 252 (44%) responded to noxious colorectal distension (CRD; 80 mmHg). Of these 252 fibers that responded to CRD, 100 were studied further. All 100 fibers gave monotonic increases in firing to increasing pressures of CRD. Eighty-eight fibers had low thresholds for response (mean: 3 mmHg) and 12 fibers had high-thresholds for response (mean: 28 mmHg). Responses of 17 fibers also were tested after instillation of 5% mustard oil (MO) into the colon. The resting activity of 16/17 fibers significantly increased after MO instillation; 13 (77%) also exhibited sensitization of responses to graded CRD when tested 30 min after intracolonic MO instillation. The effects of κ1-opioid receptor preferring agonists (U50,488H, U69,593 and U62,066), the κ2-opioid receptor preferring agonist bremazocine, and the κ3-opioid receptor preferring agonist naloxone benzoylhydrazone (nalBzoH) were tested on responses of 64 mechanosensitive afferent fibers to noxious CRD. All five agonists dose-dependently inhibited afferent fiber responses to noxious CRD. Doses producing inhibition to 50% of the control response to CRD did not differ among the five agonists, ranging from ∼4 to 15 mg/kg. The effects of κ1, κ2, and κ3receptor agonists were attenuated by naloxone; two κ-opioid receptor-selective antagonists were ineffective. There were no differences in the dose-response relationships of these drugs for fibers recorded from untreated and irritant-treated colons. Conduction velocities of the fibers remained unaffected after high doses of all tested agonists. In an in vitro study, U50,488 (10−4M) did not produce any significant change in the tension of colonic smooth muscle. These results document that responses of mechanosensitive pelvic nerve afferent fibers innervating the colon are inhibited by κ-opioid receptor agonists having varying affinities for putative κ-opioid receptor subtypes. The inhibitory effects of these drugs likely are mediated by an action at receptors associated with the afferent fibers. The receptor at which these effects are produced is κ-opioid-like but clearly different from the κ-opioid receptor characterized in the CNS and is perhaps an orphan receptor.Keywords
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