학술논문

A Balancing Act: Learning from the Past to Build a Future-Focused Opioid Strategy
Document Type
article
Source
Annual Review of Physiology. 86(1)
Subject
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Pain Research
Neurosciences
Substance Misuse
Chronic Pain
Opioid Misuse and Addiction
Prescription Drug Abuse
Opioids
Brain Disorders
Humans
Analgesics
Opioid
Drug Tolerance
Signal Transduction
opioid
arrestin
G protein
signaling bias
receptor trafficking
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Physiology
Zoology
Medical physiology
Language
Abstract
The harmful side effects of opioid drugs such as respiratory depression, tolerance, dependence, and abuse potential have limited the therapeutic utility of opioids for their entire clinical history. However, no previous attempt to develop effective pain drugs that substantially ameliorate these effects has succeeded, and the current opioid epidemic affirms that they are a greater hindrance to the field of pain management than ever. Recent attempts at new opioid development have sought to reduce these side effects by minimizing engagement of the regulatory protein arrestin-3 at the mu-opioid receptor, but there is significant controversy around this approach. Here, we discuss the ongoing effort to develop safer opioids and its relevant historical context. We propose a new model that reconciles results previously assumed to be in direct conflict to explain how different signaling profiles at the mu-opioid receptor contribute to opioid tolerance and dependence. Our goal is for this framework to inform the search for a new generation of lower liability opioid analgesics.