Abstract

Although a central site of acute opiate action in regulating luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion has been suggested by the ability of centrally implanted opiate antagonists to increase LH levels, opiate antagonists are lipophilic and could influence the pituitary in situ . Also, the physiological significance of opiate receptor blockade with antagonists rests on the assumed, but untested, stereoselectivity of these receptors. Therefore, a lipophobic quanternized derivative of naltrexone (MRZ 2663-Naltrexone methobromide) and dextro- (+) and levo- (−) stereoisomers of naloxone were used to study the site- and stereoselectivity of gonadotropin responses to opiate antagnoists in vivo . Male rats were injected intracerebroventricularly (icv) or intravenously (iv) with the quarternary or tertiary congeners of naltrexone and subcutaneously (sc) with (−) or (+)-naloxone. Rats injected icv with 20 ug of quaternary naltrexone displayed significant increases in serum luteinizing hormone (LH). The onset of the response was rapid with serum LH levels being significantly elevated 15 minutes after the injection and returning to basal levels 30 minutes later. Rats injected iv with 10 mg/kg of quaternary naltrexone failed to show significant LH responses. Rats injected either centrally or periphally with equivalent doses of tertiary naltrexone showed LH responses that were similar to those found in animals injected icv with quaternary naltrexone. As little as 0.5 mg/kg of (−)-naloxone resulted in significant elevations in serum LH that were higher than those elicited by up to 10 mg/kg of (+)-naloxone, indicating that this effect of naloxone is stereoselective. These data support the argument that opioids can acutely modulate LH secretion through actions at stereoselective opioid receptors in the central nervous system.

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