Dopamine D4 receptor activation preserves morphine analgesia and attenuates tolerance by enforcing inhibitory spinal tone in rats
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Abstract
The clinical efficacy of opioid-based therapies is severely limited by the emergence of maladaptive neuro
plasticity which drives both analgesic tolerance and paradoxical pain sensitization. Although these processes
involve spinal nociceptive circuits, the endogenous modulatory systems capable of selectively restraining mal
adaptive plasticity without compromising opioid analgesia, remain incompletely characterized. The dopamine
D4 receptor (D4R) has been previously shown to constrain morphine-induced neuroadaptations within supra
spinal circuits that underlie addiction, positioning it as a compelling candidate to regulate opioid-induced
plasticity at the spinal level. Here, we investigated whether D4R activation modulates spinal mechanisms un
derlying morphine tolerance and hyperalgesia. Using integrated behavioral, molecular, and neuroanatomical
approaches in rats, we show that D4R activation preserves morphine antinociception while attenuating tolerance
and preventing hyperalgesia. This effect is mediated by selective reshaping of dorsal horn circuitry, including
modulation of non-peptidergic C fibers afferents, enhancement of catecholaminergic tone, and a shift of the
excitatory-inhibitory balance toward inhibition. At the cellular level, D4R activation attenuates CREB-dependent
signaling and reduces neurokinin-1 (NK1) receptor availability in lamina I projection neurons, which constitute
the main spinal output to supraspinal nociceptive centers. Together, these findings identify D4R as a state-
dependent modulator of spinal nociceptive circuitry that selectively contains opioid-induced maladaptive plas
ticity while sparing analgesic signaling. These results extend the regulatory role of D4R from supraspinal
addiction-related circuits to spinal pain pathways, highlighting its potential as a therapeutic target to improve
the long-term safety of opioid analgesia.
Perspective: D4R emerges as a key regulator linking supraspinal addiction-related circuits and spinal nociceptive
pathways. By restraining maladaptive plasticity while preserving opioid analgesia, D4R offers a state-dependent
mechanism to prevent tolerance and hyperalgesia. Targeting D4R could thus provide a novel strategy to enhance
the long-term safety and efficacy of opioid therapies.
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Marina Ponce-Velasco, M. Ángeles Real, Adrián Ruiz-Villalba, Belén Gago, Iván Fatuarte-Juli, Mireya Moreno-Ruiz, Ismael Aranda-Bravo, Carolina Roza, Alicia Rivera, Dopamine D4 receptor activation preserves morphine analgesia and attenuates tolerance by enforcing inhibitory spinal tone in rats, The Journal of Pain, Volume 45, 2026, 106308, ISSN 1526-5900
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