Peripheral infusion of nociceptin/orphanin FQ influences the response of rat gastric and colonic mucosa to repeated stress

Regulatory Peptides
Daniela GrandiGiuseppina Morini

Abstract

The 17-amino acid peptide nociceptin/orphanin FQ (N/OFQ) plays a role in the regulation of stress responses and of emotional disorders. The objective of this study is to evaluate whether long-term peripheral N/OFQ could dose- and time-dependently influence the responses to repeated cold-restraint stress on the rat gastric and colonic mucosa. Rats were exposed to cold-restraint stress for 3h per day for 1, 2 and 3 consecutive days. N/OFQ was administered at doses of 0.1, 1 and 10 microg/kg/h via Alzet osmotic minipumps. In the gastric fundus, N/OFQ exerted dose-dependent beneficial effects against acute and repeated stress but, after prolonged treatment, became damaging in non-stressed rats. In the distal colon, N/OFQ exerted a protective effect against damage by acute and repeated stress with no influence on epithelial integrity in non-stressed rats. In both regions, the peptide itself dose- and time-dependently reduced intraepithelial mucins. The reduction in mucin content caused by stress was effectively counteracted by N/OFQ, 0.1 microg/kg/h, in the distal colon only. N/OFQ did not modify basal mucosal cell proliferation. The peptide at 0.1 and 1 microg/kg/h had no influence while at 10 microg/kg/h abolished stress-induced i...Continue Reading

References

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Feb 24, 2006·Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology·Elaine C Gavioli, Girolamo Calo'
Aug 2, 2008·Nature Reviews. Drug Discovery·David G Lambert

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