We have developed an experimental fibromyalgia-like mouse model using intermittent cold stress (ICS), where chronic pain is generalized, female predominant, and abolished in type 1 lysophosphatidic acid receptor-knockout (LPA1 -/-) mice but is not reversed by systemic or brain treatment with morphine. We investigated two issues in the present study: (1) whether chronic pain mechanisms and lack of brain morphine analgesia are associated in the ICS model and (2) what mechanisms are involved in the lack of morphine analgesia. ICS-induced hyperalgesia was not affected in μ-opioid receptor-knockout (MOPr -/-) mice, whereas the lack of brain morphine analgesia remained unchanged in LPA1 -/- mice, which completely abolished the hyperalgesia in the ICS model. In contrast, the lack of morphine analgesia was abolished in NR2A-NMDA receptor-knockout (NR2A -/- ) mice and blocked by intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of (R)-CPP, an NR2A antagonist, or by microinjection of siRNA NR2A into the periaqueductal gray matter region, whereas no change was observed with Ro 04-5595, an NMDA receptor subtype 2B antagonist (i.c.v.). The lack of morphine analgesia was also reversed by concomitant treatment with 1 mg/kg intraperitoneal (i.p.) of dextromethorphan, which possesses NMDA receptor antagonist activity but no analgesic activity. Finally, the hyperalgesia was completely reversed by methadone, which possesses both MOPr agonist and NMDA receptor antagonist activity. Indeed, methadone analgesia was abolished in MOPr -/- mice. These results suggest that chronic pain status and lack of morphine analgesia are independent of each other, and that lack of morphine analgesia is mediated by activation of the NR2A-NMDA receptor system. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: This study reports that a type of intermittently repeated stress causes widespread pain that does not respond to morphine. Because this lack of morphine analgesia is not affected in mice, in which chronic pain is abolished, the mechanisms underlying chronic pain and lack of morphine analgesia are independent of each other. Through speculation that a lack of morphine analgesia may be a secondary event to endogenous opioid analgesic tolerance, the authors demonstrate that an antiopioid N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor system counterbalances the μ-opioid receptor-mediated analgesic mechanisms in the intermittent cold stress model.
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