Morphine-Induced Dependence and Sensitization Are Altered in Mice Deficient in AMPA-Type Glutamate Receptor-A Subunits
Open Access
- 15 June 2001
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 21 (12) , 4451-4459
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.21-12-04451.2001
Abstract
AMPA-type glutamate receptors have been suggested to be involved in the neurobiological mechanisms of drug addiction. We have made use of two mouse lines, which both have modulated AMPA receptor responses. The first line is entirely deficient in glutamate receptor-A (GluR-A) subunits (A−/− knock-out line) and, in the second one, the Q582 residue of GluR-A subunits is replaced by an arginine residue (R/R mutants), which reduces the calcium permeability and channel conductance of the receptors containing this mutated subunit. Mice of both lines are healthy, but they show slightly increased locomotor activity. Acute morphine administration enhanced locomotor activity of the GluR-A−/− and GluR-A(R/R) mice, at least as much as that of their wild-type littermates. Only in the GluR-A−/− mice did we observe reduced tolerance development in tail-flick antinociception and less severe naloxone-precipitated withdrawal symptoms after treatment with increasing morphine doses, without differences in plasma and brain morphine levels when compared with wild type. Repeated daily morphine administration sensitized the locomotor activity responses in the GluR-A−/− and GluR-A(R/R) mice only when given in the measuring cages, whereas the wild-type mice showed slightly increased responses also when the repeated treatment was given in their home cages. Normal or even enhanced context-dependent sensitization was observed also with repeated amphetamine administration in the GluR-A subunit-deficient mice. The results indicate that AMPA receptors are involved in the acute and chronic effects of morphine, including context-independent sensitization, and that the GluR-A subunit itself is important for morphine tolerance and dependence.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- AMPA Receptors Unbound: Membrane Cycling and Synaptic PlasticityNeuron, 2000
- Molecular mechanisms of the positive reinforcing effect of nicotineBehavioural Pharmacology, 1999
- Neuroscience of AddictionPublished by Elsevier ,1998
- Repeated amphetamine administration alters the expression of mRNA for AMPA receptor subunits in rat nucleus accumbens and prefrontal cortexSynapse, 1997
- Loss of morphine-induced analgesia, reward effect and withdrawal symptoms in mice lacking the µ-opioid-receptor geneNature, 1996
- Relative abundance of subunit mRNAs determines gating and Ca2+ permeability of AMPA receptors in principal neurons and interneurons in rat CNSNeuron, 1995
- Derivation of completely cell culture-derived mice from early-passage embryonic stem cells.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1993
- Independent control of immunoglobulin switch recombination at individual switch regions evidenced through Cre-loxP-mediated gene targetingCell, 1993
- Rodent model of nicotine abstinence syndromePharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1992
- Divalent ion permeability of AMPA receptor channels is dominated by the edited form of a single subunitNeuron, 1992