Abstract
AbstractOpioids are regularly prescribed for migraine and can result in medication overuse headache and dependence. We recently showed that pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP) is upregulated following opioid administration or in a model of chronic migraine. The goal of this study was to determine if PACAP was a link between opioid use and headache chronification. We tested the effect of PACAP-PAC1 receptor inhibition in novel models of opioid-exacerbated migraine pain and aura; and examined the co-expression between mu opioid receptor (MOR), PAC1, and PACAP in headache-associated brain and peripheral regions.To model opioid exacerbated migraine pain, mice were injected daily with morphine (10 mg/kg) or vehicle for 11 days. On days 3,5,7,9, and 11 they also received the known human migraine trigger nitroglycerin (0.1 mg/kg) or vehicle. To model opioid exacerbated aura, mice were treated with vehicle or morphine twice daily for 4 days (20 mg/kg on days 1-3, 40 mg/kg on day 4), a well-established paradigm for causing opioid-induced hyperalgesia. On day 5 they underwent cortical spreading depression, a physiological correlate of migraine aura. The effect of the PAC1 inhibitor, M65 (0.1 mg/kg), was tested in these models. Fluorescent in situ hybridization was used to investigate the expression of MOR, PAC1, and PACAP.Only mice treated with combined morphine and nitroglycerin developed chronic cephalic allodynia (n=18/group). M65 reversed this hypersensitivity (n=9/group). Morphine significantly increased the number of CSD events (n=8-9/group); and M65 decreased this exacerbation by morphine (n=8-12/group). PAC1 and/or PACAP were highly co-expressed with MOR, and varied by region (n=6/group). MOR and PACAP were co-expressed in the trigeminal ganglia, while MOR and PAC1 receptor showed near complete overlap in the trigeminal nucleus caudalis and periaqueductal gray. The cortex showed similar cellular co-expression between MOR-PACAP and MOR-PAC1.These results show that opioids facilitate the transition to chronic headache through induction of PACAPergic mechanisms. Antibodies or pharmacological agents targeting PACAP or PAC1 receptor may be particularly beneficial for the treatment of opioid-induced medication overuse headache.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory