The Role of EphB2 Receptors in the Development of Morphine Tolerance

Recently we have begun to investigate a novel role of EphB receptors in opiate-dependant analgesia. EphB2-β-galactosidase knockins demonstrate that EphB2 is persistently expressed within a number of neural pathways involved in MOR-mediated nociception in vivo and that EphB2 colocalizes with markers...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kanawaty, Ashlin
Other Authors: Henderson, Jeffrey T.
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/42889
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-42889
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-428892013-12-18T03:39:23ZThe Role of EphB2 Receptors in the Development of Morphine ToleranceKanawaty, AshlinEph receptorMorphineMu opioid receptor0317Recently we have begun to investigate a novel role of EphB receptors in opiate-dependant analgesia. EphB2-β-galactosidase knockins demonstrate that EphB2 is persistently expressed within a number of neural pathways involved in MOR-mediated nociception in vivo and that EphB2 colocalizes with markers of the MOR at the cellular level in the spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia. Despite demonstrating wild-type levels of sensory and motor activity, EphB2 null mice exhibit a significantly altered analgesic response to repeated (but not naive) opiate exposure compared to controls. Investigation of EphB2 null mice and wild type animals revealed no differences in MOR protein levels or affinity. Analysis of this opiate-mediated tolerance suggests that associative phenomena play a substantial role in mediating the analgesic effects observed, possibly due to defeciencies in CA1-mediated learning. Therefore, loss of EphB2 may diminish context-dependent learning and that such learning plays a substantial role in regulating morphine-dependent tolerance.Henderson, Jeffrey T.2012-032013-11-27T16:58:42ZWITHHELD_ONE_YEAR2013-11-27T16:58:42Z2013-11-27Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/42889en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Eph receptor
Morphine
Mu opioid receptor
0317
spellingShingle Eph receptor
Morphine
Mu opioid receptor
0317
Kanawaty, Ashlin
The Role of EphB2 Receptors in the Development of Morphine Tolerance
description Recently we have begun to investigate a novel role of EphB receptors in opiate-dependant analgesia. EphB2-β-galactosidase knockins demonstrate that EphB2 is persistently expressed within a number of neural pathways involved in MOR-mediated nociception in vivo and that EphB2 colocalizes with markers of the MOR at the cellular level in the spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia. Despite demonstrating wild-type levels of sensory and motor activity, EphB2 null mice exhibit a significantly altered analgesic response to repeated (but not naive) opiate exposure compared to controls. Investigation of EphB2 null mice and wild type animals revealed no differences in MOR protein levels or affinity. Analysis of this opiate-mediated tolerance suggests that associative phenomena play a substantial role in mediating the analgesic effects observed, possibly due to defeciencies in CA1-mediated learning. Therefore, loss of EphB2 may diminish context-dependent learning and that such learning plays a substantial role in regulating morphine-dependent tolerance.
author2 Henderson, Jeffrey T.
author_facet Henderson, Jeffrey T.
Kanawaty, Ashlin
author Kanawaty, Ashlin
author_sort Kanawaty, Ashlin
title The Role of EphB2 Receptors in the Development of Morphine Tolerance
title_short The Role of EphB2 Receptors in the Development of Morphine Tolerance
title_full The Role of EphB2 Receptors in the Development of Morphine Tolerance
title_fullStr The Role of EphB2 Receptors in the Development of Morphine Tolerance
title_full_unstemmed The Role of EphB2 Receptors in the Development of Morphine Tolerance
title_sort role of ephb2 receptors in the development of morphine tolerance
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/42889
work_keys_str_mv AT kanawatyashlin theroleofephb2receptorsinthedevelopmentofmorphinetolerance
AT kanawatyashlin roleofephb2receptorsinthedevelopmentofmorphinetolerance
_version_ 1716620262469795840