Abstract
In the present study the effect of the opioid heptadecapeptide nociceptin, also termed orphanin FQ, an endogenous ligand for the orphan receptor named ORL1 (opioid receptor-like 1) receptor, was investigated on [3H]noradrenaline release induced by electrical field stimulation (24 pulses at 0.4 Hz, 200 mA, 0.3 ms duration) in the rat tail artery in the absence and presence of an alpha2-adrenoceptor antagonist, rauwolscine 3 microM. Nociceptin inhibited the electrically-evoked tritiated noradrenaline release in a concentration-dependent manner from rat tail arteries. This inhibitory effect of nociceptin was enhanced in the presence of the alpha2-adrenoceptor antagonist rauwolscine (maximum inhibition by 25% and 50% in the absence and presence of rauwolscine, respectively). At a supramaximal concentration (10 microM), the inhibitory action of DAGO, a selective micro-opioid receptor agonist, was less pronounced than that of nociceptin. The inhibitory effect of nociceptin was counteracted by naloxone benzoylhydrazone (3 microM) which by itself did not change the stimulation-evoked noradrenaline overflow. Naloxone (10 microM), a non-selective opioid receptor antagonist, did not affect the inhibitory effect of nociceptin whereas it abolished that of DAGO. In conclusion, these results suggest that nociceptin modulates noradrenergic neurotransmission by acting on prejunctional ORL1 receptors located on nerve terminals innervating the rat tail artery. They also demonstrate that prejunctional ORL1 receptors interact with prejunctional alpha2-adrenoceptors. The physiological significance of this phenomenon remains to be determined.
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