D1 dopamine / mu opioid receptor interactions in operant conditioning assays of pain-depressed responding and drug-induced rate suppression, and a conditioned place preference procedure: assessment of therapeutic index in male Sprague Dawley rats
- PMID: 39832015
- DOI: 10.1007/s00213-025-06743-9
D1 dopamine / mu opioid receptor interactions in operant conditioning assays of pain-depressed responding and drug-induced rate suppression, and a conditioned place preference procedure: assessment of therapeutic index in male Sprague Dawley rats
Abstract
Rationale and objectives: In vivo receptor interactions vary as a function of behavioral endpoint, with key differences between reflexive and non-reflexive measures that assess the motivational aspects of pain and pain relief. There have been no assessments of D1 dopamine agonist / mu opioid receptor (MOR) agonist interactions in non-reflexive behavioral measures of pain. We examined the hypothesis that D1/MOR mixtures show enhanced effectiveness in blocking pain depressed behaviors while showing decreased side effects such as sedation and drug reward.
Methods: SKF82958 and methadone were used as selective/high efficacy D1 and mu agonists, respectively. An FR10 operant schedule was utilized in the presence and absence of a lactic acid inflammatory pain-like manipulation, to measure antinociceptive and operant-rate-suppressing effects, respectively. Rewarding properties of the drug combinations were determined using a conditioned place preference procedure.
Results: Methadone alone, but not SKF82958 alone, produced dose-dependent restoration of pain-depressed responding. Both SKF82958 and methadone produced dose-dependent response rate suppression. Three fixed proportion mixtures, based on the relative potencies of the drugs in the rate suppression assay, produced dose-dependent antinociception and sedation. Isobolographic analysis indicated that the 0.17:1 mixture produced supra-additive antinociception and additive sedation. The 0.055:1 mixture produced additive antinociception with sub-additive sedation, and the 0.018:1 mixture had the highest therapeutic index (TI) relative to other mixtures and drugs alone. The antinociceptive doses and component doses for the 0.018:1 mixture did not produce conditioned place preference.
Conclusions: These results suggest that D1-selective dopamine agonists may have utility as candidate opioid-sparing analgesics.
Keywords: D1 receptor; Dopamine receptor; Methadone; Operant conditioning; Opioid receptor; Opioid sparing; Pain-depressed behaviors; Receptor interactions.
© 2025. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
Conflict of interest statement
Declarations. Conflict of interest: The authors declare that there exists no competing financial interest or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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