Inhibiting spinal cord-specific hsp90 isoforms reveals a novel strategy to improve the therapeutic index of opioid treatment.

TitleInhibiting spinal cord-specific hsp90 isoforms reveals a novel strategy to improve the therapeutic index of opioid treatment.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2024
AuthorsDuron DI, Tanguturi P, Campbell CS, Chou K, Bejarano P, Gabriel KA, Bowden JL, Mishra S, Brackett C, Barlow D, Houseknecht KL, Blagg BSJ, Streicher JM
JournalSci Rep
Volume14
Issue1
Pagination14715
Date Published2024 Jun 26
ISSN2045-2322
KeywordsAnalgesics, Opioid, Animals, Chronic Pain, Disease Models, Animal, Drug Tolerance, Female, HSP90 Heat-Shock Proteins, Injections, Spinal, Male, Mice, Morphine, Protein Isoforms, Spinal Cord
Abstract

Opioids are the gold standard for the treatment of chronic pain but are limited by adverse side effects. In our earlier work, we showed that Heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) has a crucial role in regulating opioid signaling in spinal cord; Hsp90 inhibition in spinal cord enhances opioid anti-nociception. Building on these findings, we injected the non-selective Hsp90 inhibitor KU-32 by the intrathecal route into male and female CD-1 mice, showing that morphine anti-nociceptive potency was boosted by 1.9-3.5-fold in acute and chronic pain models. At the same time, tolerance was reduced from 21-fold to 2.9 fold and established tolerance was rescued, while the potency of constipation and reward was unchanged. These results demonstrate that spinal Hsp90 inhibition can improve the therapeutic index of morphine. However, we also found that systemic non-selective Hsp90 inhibition blocked opioid pain relief. To avoid this effect, we used selective small molecule inhibitors and CRISPR gene editing to identify 3 Hsp90 isoforms active in spinal cord (Hsp90α, Hsp90β, and Grp94) while only Hsp90α was active in brain. We thus hypothesized that a systemically delivered selective inhibitor to Hsp90β or Grp94 could selectively inhibit spinal cord Hsp90 activity, resulting in enhanced opioid therapy. We tested this hypothesis using intravenous delivery of KUNB106 (Hsp90β) and KUNG65 (Grp94), showing that both drugs enhanced morphine anti-nociceptive potency while rescuing tolerance. Together, these results suggest that selective inhibition of spinal cord Hsp90 isoforms is a novel, translationally feasible strategy to improve the therapeutic index of opioids.

DOI10.1038/s41598-024-65637-6
Alternate JournalSci Rep
PubMed ID38926482
PubMed Central IDPMC11208559
Grant ListR01 DA052340 / DA / NIDA NIH HHS / United States
R01DA052340 / DA / NIDA NIH HHS / United States
ADHS18-198875 / / Arizona Biomedical Research Commission /
Faculty Member Reference: 
John M. Streicher, PhD