Antisense Mapping of the MOR-1 Opioid Receptor Clone: Modulation of Hyperphagia Induced by DAMGO 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT The mu opioid receptor mediates ingestive behavior: muselective agonists stimulate food intake and antagonists reduce intake in many ingestive situations. Antisense oligodeoxynucleotides directed against each of the four exons of the MOR-1 clone were equally effective in reducing spontaneous food intake and body weight in rats. However, antisense probes directed against only exon 1 or 4 of the MOR-1 clone reduced mu-mediated analgesia. The present study examined whether central administration of antisense probes directed against each of the four exons of the MOR-1 clone or a missense control altered hyperphagia elicited by the mu agonist DAMGO across a range of doses. Antisense probes directed against only exon 1 or 4 blocked hyperphagia at agonist doses of 0.5 and 1.0 g; this pattern was identical to that observed for mu-mediated analgesia. A missense control failed to exert significant effects, which suggests specificity of antisense actions. The effective antisense probes failed to reduce hyperphagia at a higher (5 g) agonist dose, a result consistent with limitations in down-regulation of receptor proteins by antisense. The mu antagonist ␀-funaltrexamine produced a similar pattern of effects on mu-mediated hyperphagia. The selective actions of antisense probes directed against different exons of the MOR-1 clone in reducing hyperphagia induced by DAMGO suggest that multiple splice variants of the MOR-1 clone exist and raise the possibility of further opioid receptor subclassifications

    Similar works