Endogenous opioids accumulate in plasma in a rat model of acute cholestasis

MG Swain, RB Rothman, H Xu, J Vergalla, NV Bergasa… - Gastroenterology, 1992 - Elsevier
MG Swain, RB Rothman, H Xu, J Vergalla, NV Bergasa, EA Jones
Gastroenterology, 1992Elsevier
To obtain data on the degree to which the opioid system is changed in cholestasis,
endogenous opioid activity in plasma of rats with acute cholestasis was determined 5 days
after bile duct resection. Total plasma opioid activity was determined using a radioreceptor
technique that measured the displacement of the opiate receptor ligand [3 H]-DAMGO from
lysed synapsosomal fractions of normal rat brain. Plasma total opioid activity was threefold
greater in bile duct-resected rats than in sham-operated and unoperated controls (P≤ 0.05) …
Abstract
To obtain data on the degree to which the opioid system is changed in cholestasis, endogenous opioid activity in plasma of rats with acute cholestasis was determined 5 days after bile duct resection. Total plasma opioid activity was determined using a radioreceptor technique that measured the displacement of the opiate receptor ligand [3H]-DAMGO from lysed synapsosomal fractions of normal rat brain. Plasma total opioid activity was threefold greater in bile duct-resected rats than in sham-operated and unoperated controls (P ≤ 0.05). Plasma levels of the individual endogenous opioid, methionine-enkephalin, were determined using a sensitive radioimmunoassay, and the specificity of the assay was confirmed using high-performance liquid chromatography. In cholestatic rats, plasma methionine-enkephalin levels were more than sixfold greater than in sham-operated controls (P ≤ 0.001) and more than 17-fold greater than in unoperated controls (P ≤ 0.001). However, plasma methionine-enkephalin levels accounted for <5% of total plasma opioid activity after bile duct resection. Plasma methionine-enkephalin levels in both cholestatic plasma and plasma from sham-operated animals were stable when incubated in vitro despite the presence of undiminished activity of the major enkephalin-degrading enzymes. Thus, protection of methionine-enkephalin from degradation may be a factor contributing to the elevated plasma levels of methionine-enkephalin found in cholestasis. The magnitude of the increase in plasma endogenous opioid activity in bile duct-resected rats provides support for the hypothesis that endogenous opioids contribute to the pathophysiology of cholestasis.
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