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Background: Rats with liver cirrhosis, evoked by chronic administration of thioacetamide (TAA), consumed voluntarily more alcohol than their healthy counterparts. Seeking the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon, the opioid system was screened for involvement and alterations. In vivo, the influence of chronically administered Naloxone and Naltrexone, non-specific opioid receptor antagonists, on alcohol intake was examined in free choice tests between 10% alcohol and tap water and ex vivo receptor binding studies were performed on cerebral membrane preparations. Methods: TAA rats, selected for the study, had confirmed liver insufficiency: their plasma bilirubin concentrations were about 3 times higher, the prothrombin time was 50% longer and they consumed voluntarily 3 times more alcohol than the control animals. The drugs were given s.c. for five days, at the beginning of the dark phase of a 24h cycle, in a daily dose of 10 mg per kg body mass. Throughout the treatment, the rats were kept individually in metabolic cages with a free access to water, alcohol solution and food. Feed and fluid consumption, as well as the urine outputs, were recorded on the 2h, 4h, 6h and 24h after the drug administration. The mu opioid ligand – [3H]-(D-Ala2, -N-MePhe4, Glyol5) Enkephalin was used to obtain binding characteristics of the control and TAA rat brain membranes. Results: The drugs, if modified drinking behaviours, they did it transiently; alcohol, water and thus the total fluid intake by the cirrhotic and control rats was significantly less after 2h – 6h from either naloxone or naltrexone administration. Both drugs decreased general fluid consumption as such rather than the consumption of alcohol only, as observed from the recordings related to TAA rats. The binding data: Kd of 2.62 ± 0.98 nM and Bmax of 43.71 ± 6.12 fmol/mg protein for cirrhotic rats, versus Kd of 4.63 ± 1.98 nM and Bmax 95.61 ± 18.33 fmol/mg protein for the control ones, suggest that while the affinity of radioligand to cerebral mu receptors was similar for the two groups, there was a lower density of those receptors in the cirrhotic rats. Conclusions: The results indicate some disturbances in the opioid system in cirrhotic rats. However, the low response to opioid therapy suggests that the opioid system may have only be partly involved in the development of the observed increased alcohol drinking in the rats with liver cirrhosis.
Opioid peptides are the most effective drugs in controlling pain; their action is elicited by binding to specific membrane receptors. The gastrointestinal tract represents, after the nervous system, the site in which the opioid receptors are expressed at high levels. The opioid agonist morphine has a significant inhibitory effect on intestinal motility, this action is blocked by naloxone an opioid antagonist mainly active at mu and kappa receptors. In this study the presence of mu opioid receptor on rabbit jejunum was investigated by western blot. The effects of beta-endorphin, the endogenous opioid peptide with the highest affinity to the mu opioid receptor and those of naloxone on spontaneous rabbit jejunum contractions were evaluated. Beta-endorphin (10-6M) showed a relaxant effect on jejunum contractility while naloxone showed a dual effect inducing an increase of spontaneous contractility at low concentrations (10-6M, 10-7M, 10-8M) and a decrease when high concentrations (10-3M, 10-4M, 10-5M) were utilized. The obtained results demonstrate that mu opioid receptor is expressed in rabbit jejunum and suggest that this receptor may be involved in mediating the effects of both opioid agonist and antagonist on jejunum contractions.
The possible physiological role of testicular opioid peptides in the control of testicular functions has been studied. In neonatal rats in tratest icular administration of opiate receptor antagonists (naloxone, nalmefene) stimulates Sertoli cell proliferation and secretion. Both in adult and neonatal rats local injection of the testis with opiate receptor antagonists or with ß-endorphin antiserum results in a decrease in steroidogenesis in long-term studies. Treatment of neonatal testis with an enkephalin analogue induces a short-term suppression of testosterone secretion. Further studies were carried out to investigate whether the above described local effects of opiate agonist or antagonist on testicular function are under the regulatory control of testicular nerves. Partial denervation of the testis was performed by testicular injection of 6-hydroxydopamine (a neurotoxin degenerating sympathetic neural structures) or by vasectomy (cutting the inferior spermatic nerve). If testicular administration of opioid agonist or antagonist was combined with partial denervation of the testis, the effects of pharmacological agents influencing testicular opioid level were not evident. The data indicate that opioid peptides synthesized in the testis are components,of the intratest icular regulatory system and that local opioid actions are modulated by testicular nerves.
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