Abstract

How cellular adaptations give rise to opioid analgesic tolerance to opioids like morphine is not well understood. For one, pain is a complex phenomenon comprising both sensory and affective components, largely mediated through separate circuits. Glutamatergic projections from the medial thalamus (MThal) to the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) are implicated in processing of affective pain, a relatively understudied component of the pain experience. The goal of this study was to determine the effects of chronic morphine exposure on mu-opioid receptor (MOR) signaling on MThal-ACC synaptic transmission within the excitatory and feedforward inhibitory pathways. Using whole cell patch-clamp electrophysiology and optogenetics to selectively target these projections, we measured morphine-mediated inhibition of optically evoked postsynaptic currents in ACC layer V pyramidal neurons in drug-naïve and chronically morphine-treated mice. We found that morphine perfusion inhibited the excitatory and feedforward inhibitory pathways similarly in females but caused greater inhibition of the inhibitory pathway in males. Chronic morphine treatment robustly attenuated morphine presynaptic inhibition within the inhibitory pathway in males, but not females, and mildly attenuated presynaptic inhibition within the excitatory pathway in both sexes. These effects were not observed in MOR phosphorylation-deficient mice. This study indicates that chronic morphine treatment induces cellular tolerance to morphine within a thalamo-cortical circuit relevant to pain and opioid analgesia. Furthermore, it suggests this tolerance may be driven by MOR phosphorylation. Overall, these findings improve our understanding of how chronic opioid exposure alters cellular signaling in ways that may contribute to opioid analgesic tolerance.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Opioid signaling within the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is important for opioid modulation of affective pain. Glutamatergic medial thalamus (MThal) neurons synapse in the ACC and opioids, acting through mu opioid receptors (MORs), acutely inhibit synaptic transmission from MThal synapses. However, the effect of chronic opioid exposure on MThal-ACC synaptic transmission is not known. Here, we demonstrate that chronic morphine treatment induces cellular tolerance at these synapses in a sex-specific and phosphorylation-dependent manner.

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