Title: Opioids history,
1Opioids history, receptors, addiction.
Regina Komsa
2Opioids history
- Opium has been used for hundreds years to
relieve pain. Word opium is derived from "opos -
juice in Greek - Opium is the dried milky juice of the unripe
seed capsule of the poppy, the Papaver
somniferum,. - Opium is a complex chemical cocktail of morphine
(10-15), codeine (1-3), noscapine (4-8),
papaverine (1-3), and thebaine (1-2 - The opioid analgesics are of inestimable value
because they reduce or abolish pain without
causing a loss of consciousness. They also
relieve coughs, spasms, fevers and diarrhea
3- Archaeological evidence and fossilised poppy
seeds suggest that Neanderthal man may have used
the opium poppy 30,000 BC. - The first known written reference to the poppy
hul gil - plant of joy appears in a Sumerian
text dated around 4,000 BC.. - The art of poppy-culling continued from Sumerians
to Assyrians, Babylonians who in turn would pass
their knowledge to the Egyptians. - Throughout the Egyptian civilisation,
priest-physicians promoted the household use of
opium preparations. In the capital city of
Thebes, Egyptians begun the cultivation of opium
thebaicum.
4- c. 460 B.C. Hippocrates, "the father of
medicine", dismissed the magical attributes of
opium but acknowledged its usefulness as a
narcotic and styptic in treating internal
diseases, diseases of women and epidemics. - 330 B.C. Alexander the Great introduced opium to
the people of Persia and India. - Arabic physicians used opium quite often and
Arabic traders brought opium from the eight
century on, first to the East, to India and
China, and later to Europe.
5Marcus Aurelius(AD 121 - 180)
- Stoic philosopher and illustrious opium-eater
Emperor Marcus Aurelius (reigned AD 161 - 180),
Emperor ruled during "...the period in the
history of the world, during which the condition
of the human race was most happy and
prosperous..." (Gibbon). - Marcus Aurelius wrote Meditations (AD 167).
Meditations explains how the moral life leads to
tranquillity. Marcus stresses the virtues of
wisdom, justice, fortitude, and moderation. He
recommended opium-eating for headache, dizziness,
epilepsy, asthma, fever, leprosy and other ills
of the flesh.
6 Greek physician Galen lists medical indications
of opium... ".. resists poison and venomous
bites, cures chronic headache, deafness,
epilepsy, apoplexy, dimness of sight, loss of
voice, asthma, coughs of all kinds, spitting of
blood, tightness of breath, colic, the lilac
poison, jaundice, hardness of the spleen stone,
urinary complaints, fever, dropsies, leprosies,
the trouble to which women are subject,
melancholy and all pestilences."
Galen(AD 131-200 )
7Philippus Aureolus TheophrastusBombastus von
Hohenheim"Paracelsus"(1490-1541
Medicinal use of opium was stimulated by the
famous physician Paracelsus at the end of the
middle ages by the introduction of tincture of
opium or laudanum. Paracelsus claimed ".. .I
possess a secret remedy which I call laudanum and
which is superior to all other heroic remedies."
8- The Mohammedan prohibition of wine favored the
spread of opium
9- The banning of wine and tobacco smoking in China
may have favored the spread of opium. - An attempt to forbid the import of opium into
China by the authorities, led to the so-called
"Opium War" between England and China, launched
by the biggest, and richest perhaps drug cartel
the world has ever known, the British Empire. - The Chinese were defeated. They were forced to
sign the Treaty of Nanjing in 1842. - The British required that the opium trade be
allowed to continue that the Chinese pay a large
settlement and open five new ports to foreign
trade and that China cede Hong Kong to Britain. - Peace didn't last. The Second Opium War began and
ended in 1856 over western demands that opium
markets be expanded.
10- In 1805 Morphine was first isolated from opium
by a German pharmacist, Wilhelm Sertürner
(1783-1841). Sertürner named it morphium - after
Morpheus, the Greek god of dreams. -
- From the mid-nineteenth century on, morphine was
parenterally administered as premedication for
surgical procedures and for postoperative and
chronic pain. -
- The fact that Morphine appeared to be as
addictive as opium stimulated research to develop
nonaddictive opiates.
11- In 1874, English pharmacist Alder Wright had
boiled morphine and acetic acid to produce
diacetylmorphine - heroin, a white, odourless,
bitter, crystalline powder. - Heinrich Dreser - a head of Bayer's
pharmacological laboratory from 1897 to 1914
was the first to see its commercial potential.
Under his instructions it was synthesized by
Hoffmann in Bayer laboratory. - In 1898, heroin was introduced as the ideal
nonaddictive substitute for morphine.
Professor Heinrich Dreser(1860 - 1924)
12- In November 1898, Dreser presented the drug to
the Congress of German Naturalists and
Physicians, claiming it was 10 times more
effective as a cough medicine than codeine, but
had only a tenth of its toxic effects. It was
also more effective than morphine as a painkiller
- it was launched and registered as a trademark in
various countries in November 1898 - The initial response to its launch was
overwhelmingly positive. - Dreser had already written about the drug in
medical journals, and studies had endorsed his
view that heroin could be effective in treating
asthma, bronchitis, phthisis and tuberculosis
13Advertisement
Heroin as a cough medicine
14- By 1899, Bayer was producing about a ton of
heroin a year, and exporting the drug to 23
countries. - There were heroin pastilles, heroin cough
lozenges, heroin tablets, water-soluble heroin
salts and a heroin elixir in a glycerine
solution. - In 1906, the American Medical Association
approved heroin for medical use, though with
strong reservations about a "habit" that was
"readily formed". - As early as 1899, researchers began to report
patients developing "tolerance" to the drug,
while a German researcher denounced it as "an
extremely dangerous poison".
15- By 1902 - when heroin sales were accounting for
roughly five percent of Bayer's net profits - French and American researchers were reporting
cases of "heroinism" and addiction. - In 1913, Bayer decided to stop making heroin.
- 1924 - Heroin Act - made manufacture and
possession of heroin illegal.1930 - Federal
Bureau of Narcotics was created.1970 -
Controlled Substances Act was passed - divided
drugs into categories, set regulations and
penalties for narcotics
16- The exact brain mechanisms that cause tolerance
and addiction are not completely understood. - Opiates stimulate a "pleasure system" in the
brain. This system involves neurons in the
midbrain that use the neurotransmitter called
"dopamine." These midbrain dopamine neurons
project to another structure called the nucleus
accumbens which then projects to the cerebral
cortex. This system is responsible for the
pleasurable effects of heroin and for the
addictive power of the drug. - Other neurotransmitter systems, such as those
related to endorphins, are also likely to be
involved with withdrawal from and tolerance to
heroin - .
17- We are all naturally dependent on opioids for our
emotional health - The term opioid is used for all substances with
an opiate-agonistic action. - Endogenous and exogenous opioids can be
distinguished, depending on whether the
substances are normally present in the body or
not. - Exogenous opioids natural -morhine, codeine,
thebaine, - semi synthetic, heroin,
- synthetic fentanyl, methadone, nalloxone
- During the 20th century a number of drugs were
synthesized with a morphine-like action, but with
a structure somewhat different from that of
morphine
18 codeine
morphine
heroin
19naloxone
methadone
fentanyl
20- First discovered endogenous opioids - enkephalins
(from the Greek "in the head"), (Hughes et al.
1975). - There appeared to be two pentapeptides,
- Met-enkephalin
- Leu-enkephalin
- Nowadays endogenous opioids are schematically
divided into three main classes enkephalins,
dynorphins, endorphins. - These peptides are synthesized via the
proteolytic processing of larger inactive
precursor molecules i.e. proenkephalin,
prodynorphin and proopiomelanocortin.
21- The opioids produce their effects by interacting
with a specific receptor. - The structural similarities between all
substances with an opiate-like action and the
discovery of opiate agonists and antagonists,
generated the concept of opiate receptors. - Goldstein et al. (1971) used radiolabeled
levorphanol to discover opiate-binding sites in
subcellular fractions of mouse brain.
22- Based on their behavioral and neurophysiological
findings three types receptors were distinguished - µ-type for morphine, which induces analgesia,
hypothermia, meiosis, addiction. µ- receptors are
found mainly in the brainstem and the medial
thalamus. - There are two primary sub-types µ-1 and µ-2.
- Stimulation of the µ-1 receptors is primarily
responsible for the beautiful sense of euphoria,
serenity and analgesia - ? -type (antinociception) As compared with µ-type
- greater relief of neuropathic pain , reduced
respiratory depression, and constipation as well
as a minimal potential for the development of
physical dependence was identified - ? -type (induces depression of flexor reflexes,
sedation, mediates dysphoria, ),
23- More recently, cDNA encoding an "orphan" receptor
was identified with high degree of homology to
the "classical" opioid receptors. - It has been named ORL1 (opioid receptor-like).
- This receptor is widely distributed in the brain
and is responsive to the novel peptide orphanin
FQ also known as nociceptin. - In contrast to the effects of classic opioid
receptors, the ORL1 receptor appears to mediate
hyperalgesia. - ORL1 receptor can also mediate analgesia
- Studies conducted on the cloned opioid receptors
demonstrate that the amino acid sequence of the
?-, ?-, µ-opioid and ORL1 receptors are 65
homologous
24- Some kind of preference for the different
endogenous opioid ligands for the certain
receptors was found - ?-endorphin and Endomorphins 1 and 2 for µ,
- enkephalins for ?
- and dynorphins for ? ,
- nociceptin -orphanin FQ for ORL1.
25(No Transcript)
26- Studies conducted on the cloned opioid receptors
demonstrate that the MOR-1 gene, encoding for one
form of the m-receptor, shows approximately
50-70 homology to the genes encoding for the ?
-(DOR-1), ?-(KOR-1) and orphan (ORL1) receptors - All classes of opioid receptor share key
similarities. Their activation produces a wide
array of cellular responses as analgesia,
suppression of protein synthesis, schizophrenia,
and immune response regulation. - Based on results of pharmacological
investigations, ? -, ? -, and µ-opioid receptors
have been further subdivided into receptor
subtypes ( µ1, µ2 ? 1, ? 2 ? 1, 2, 3). - There is pharmacological evidence for subtypes of
each receptor and other types of novel, less
well-characterised opioid receptors, e, l, i, z,
have also been postulated.
27- Opioid receptor types belong to the Gi/Go-coupled
superfamily of receptors, - includes numerous neurotransmitter and hormonal
receptors - possesses a common three-dimensional structure
that spans the cell membrane seven times, forming
three extracellular loops and three intracellular
loops. - extracellular amino terminus
- intracellular carboxyl terminus
- the transmembrane regions and the intracellular
loops possess the greatest similarity - the most divergent regions are the extracellular
loops and the amino- and carboxyl-terminals . - 370-400 amino acids
- 2-5 glycosylation sites
- negatively coupled through Gi protein to
adenylate cyclase.
28DELTA
KAPPA
MU
ORPHAN
29(No Transcript)
30- When they are activated, they activate other
downstream effectors to mediate a biological
response in the cell - There are four general families of ? subunits
Gs, Gi, Gq, and G12.
31- The Gs ? subunit primarily activates an enzyme
called adenylyl cyclase that catalyzes the
formation of cAMP from ATP. - The Gi ? subunit inhibits adenylyl cyclase.
- The Gq ? subunit activates an enzyme called
phospholipase C Beta (PLC) that cleaves
phosphotidylinositol-4, 5-bisphosphate (PIP2) in
the cell membrane to release two second
messengers diacylglycerol (DAG) and inositol-(1,
4, 5)-trisphosphate (IP3). - The G12 ? -subunit has been shown to stimulate
c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) activity through
the low molecular weight GTP-binding proteins
Ras, Rac, and Cdc42. - G ? 12Q229L stimulated Src family kinase activity
and v-Src induced JNK activation. Heterotrimeric
G protein G12 stimulates diverse physiological
responses including the activities of Na/H
exchangers and Jun kinases.
32- The G12 ?-subunit
- has been shown to induce cellular transformation
when overexpressed or oncogenically activated in
rodent fibroblasts, interacting between with the
Ras-Raf-MAPK pathway - cooperative effect on focus-forming ability when
G ? 12 and c-raf-1 cDNAs were co-transfected into
NIH3T3 cells. NIH3T3 cells coexpressing both G ?
12 and c-raf-1 resulted in the constitutive
activation of the mitogenic-activated protein
kinase (MAPK
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35Opioids addiction.
- Opiate addiction is a chronically relapsing
disorder that is characterized by compulsive drug
taking, an inability to limit intake, and bouts
of intense drug craving that can be precipitated
by the mere presence of people, places, or
objects previously associated with drug use. - Opiate drugs exert their effects by binding to
three opioid receptor types (µ, ? , and ) and
mimicking the actions of endogenous opioid
peptides, the endorphins, endomorphins,
enkephalins, and dynorphins. - The µ-opioid receptor (MOR) subtype is critical
for the rewarding effects of heroin and morphine.
Blockade of MORs but not other opioid receptors
attenuates opiate self-administration, and
constitutive deletion of MORs attenuates the
conditioned preferences that animals exhibit for
contextual cues previously associated with opiate
administration
36- As a result of tolerance formation multiple
cellular adaptations are elicited by chronic
exposure to opioids. These include - diminution of spare opioid receptors,
- decreased opioid receptor density and G protein
content and coupling thereof. - All imply that opioid tolerance is a
manifestation of a loss of opioid function, i.e.,
desensitization
37- These molecular changes include the up-regulation
of adenylyl cyclase (AC) isoforms of the type two
family as well as a substantial increase in their
phosphorylation state. - There are as many as nine isoforms of AC many of
which are differentially regulated. - It was found that chronic morphine induces
phosphorylation of AC isoforms II and/or VII and
also increases the synthesis of AC IV and VII. - These changes should result in a shift in opioid
receptor signaling from predominantly Gia
inhibitory to Gbg stimulatory. - Indeed, we have demonstrated that Gsa/Gbg
stimulation of AC is significantly augmented
following chronic morphine. - Thus, one consequence of chronic morphine would
be the up-regulation of divergent
receptor-coupled stimulatory AC signaling
38- The schematic diagram shows new signaling
strategies after chronic morphine treatment.
Chronic morphine augments production of new
adenylyl cyclase isoforms of the type II family
as well as their phosphorylation. As a result,
opioid signaling shifts from predominantly Gsa
inhibitory to Gsa/Gbg stimulatory.