Buprenorphine and methadone differentially alter early brain development in human cortical organoids

丁丙诺啡和美沙酮对人类皮质类器官早期大脑发育有不同的改变

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作者:Hang Yao, Daisy Hu, Juan Wang, Wei Wu, Helen H Zhao, Lu Wang, Joe Gleeson, Gabriel G Haddad

Abstract

Buprenorphine (BUP) and methadone (MTD) are used for medication-assisted treatment (MAT) in opioid use disorder. Although both medications show improved maternal and neonatal outcomes compared with illicit opioid use during pregnancy, BUP has exhibited more favorable outcomes to newborns than MTD. The underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms for the difference between BUP and MTD are largely unknown. Here, we examined the growth and neuronal activity in human cortical organoids (hCOs) exposed to BUP or MTD. We found that the growth of hCOs was significantly restricted in the MTD-treated but not in the BUP-treated hCOs and BUP attenuated the growth-restriction effect of MTD in hCOs. Furthermore, a κ-receptor agonist restricted while an antagonist alleviated the growth-restriction effect of MTD in hCOs. Since BUP is not only a μ-agonist but a κ-antagonist, the prevention of this growth-restriction by BUP is likely due to its κ-receptor-antagonism. In addition, using multielectrode array (MEA) technique, we discovered that both BUP and MTD inhibited neuronal activity in hCOs but BUP showed suppressive effects only at higher concentrations. Furthermore, κ-receptor antagonist nBNI did not prevent the MTD-induced suppression of neuronal activity in hCOs but the NMDA-antagonism of MTD (that BUP lacks) plays a role in the inhibition of neuronal activity. We conclude that, although both MTD and BUP are μ-opioid agonists, a) the additional κ-receptor antagonism of BUP mitigates the MTD-induced growth restriction during neurodevelopment and b) the lack of NMDA antagonism of BUP (in contrast to MTD) induces much less suppressive effect on neural network communications.

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