PMID: 16641868Apr 28, 2006Paper

Alcohol-, nicotine-, and cocaine-evoked release of morphine from invertebrate ganglia: model system for screening drugs of abuse

Medical Science Monitor : International Medical Journal of Experimental and Clinical Research
Wei ZhuGeorge B Stefano

Abstract

Invertebrates express regulatory receptors, transporters, and channels responsive to established drugs of abuse, many of which mediate their effects through catecholamine pathways. We hypothesized that invertebrate neural systems may serve as models by which to evaluate the interactive pharmacological effects of these agents. Ex vivo pharmacological trials determined the effects of saturating levels of ethanol on morphine levels in pooled Mytilus edulis ganglia via HPLC coupled to electrochemical detection and/or HPLC/RIA analyses. Additional trials evaluated the ability of ethanol, nicotine, and cocaine, to promote evoked release of 125I-labeled morphine from neural tissues, because intrinsically low levels of morphine did not allow direct quantification of its release. Incubation of pooled M. edulis pedal ganglia with 200 mM ethanol (approximately 1% ethanol v/v) resulted in a two-fold increase in morphine concentration at 15 min, return to baseline at 30 min, and a 50% decrease in morphine concentration at 60 min. Separate incubations of pooled M. edulis pedal ganglia and H. americanus nerve cord with ethanol, cocaine, and nicotine resulted in a statistically significant enhancement of 125I-trace labeled morphine release. Th...Continue Reading

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