minocycline and ibudilast

minocycline has been researched along with ibudilast* in 6 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for minocycline and ibudilast

ArticleYear
Glial modulators as potential treatments of psychostimulant abuse.
    Advances in pharmacology (San Diego, Calif.), 2014, Volume: 69

    Glia (including astrocytes, microglia, and oligodendrocytes), which constitute the majority of cells in the brain, have many of the same receptors as neurons, secrete neurotransmitters and neurotrophic and neuroinflammatory factors, control clearance of neurotransmitters from synaptic clefts, and are intimately involved in synaptic plasticity. Despite their prevalence and spectrum of functions, appreciation of their potential general importance has been elusive since their identification in the mid-1800s, and only relatively recently have they been gaining their due respect. This development of appreciation has been nurtured by the growing awareness that drugs of abuse, including the psychostimulants, affect glial activity, and glial activity, in turn, has been found to modulate the effects of the psychostimulants. This developing awareness has begun to illuminate novel pharmacotherapeutic targets for treating psychostimulant abuse, for which targeting more conventional neuronal targets has not yet resulted in a single, approved medication. In this chapter, we discuss the molecular pharmacology, physiology, and functional relationships that the glia have especially in the light in which they present themselves as targets for pharmacotherapeutics intended to treat psychostimulant abuse disorders. We then review a cross section of preclinical studies that have manipulated glial processes whose behavioral effects have been supportive of considering the glia as drug targets for psychostimulant-abuse medications. We then close with comments regarding the current clinical evaluation of relevant compounds for treating psychostimulant abuse, as well as the likelihood of future prospects.

    Topics: Animals; Brain; Central Nervous System Stimulants; Humans; Minocycline; Neuroglia; Pyridines; Signal Transduction; Substance-Related Disorders; Treatment Outcome

2014

Other Studies

5 other study(ies) available for minocycline and ibudilast

ArticleYear
Ibudilast produces anti-allodynic effects at the persistent phase of peripheral or central neuropathic pain in rats: Different inhibitory mechanism on spinal microglia from minocycline and propentofylline.
    European journal of pharmacology, 2018, Aug-15, Volume: 833

    Microglia exhibit various activation phenotypes in the spinal cord after peripheral nerve injury, and promote neuropathic pain. Ibudilast is a phosphodiesterase inhibitor with anti-inflammatory activity, but its effect on activated microglia in chronic neuropathic pain is poorly understood. We investigated whether ibudilast was effective on established allodynia associated with activated microglial phenotypes in two rat models of peripheral and central neuropathic pain. A single intrathecal injection of ibudilast (25 μg) inhibited established allodynia on days 7-21 after sciatic nerve injury in rats. Repeated injections of ibudilast (25 μg/day) reduced the numbers of phosphorylated p38-positive cells without changing hypertrophic microglia, whereas minocycline (100 μg/day) decreased the numbers of hypertrophic microglia associated with phosphorylated p38 levels in the spinal cord. Gene analysis revealed that minocycline, but not ibudilast, increased the expression of anti-inflammatory cytokine genes Il10 and Tgfβ1 in the spinal cord. Propentofylline (100 μg/day) was less effective on microglial phenotypes and established allodynia. Ibudilast inhibited persistent allodynia after the recovery of motor deficits in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis rats. Therefore, ibudilast might be effective for chronic neuropathic pain after peripheral and central nerve damage. Ibudilast mediated these effects on activated microglia using a different mechanism compared with minocycline and propentofylline.

    Topics: Animals; Encephalomyelitis, Autoimmune, Experimental; Female; Humans; Hyperalgesia; Injections, Spinal; Male; Microglia; Minocycline; Neuralgia; Neuroprotective Agents; p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases; Pain Measurement; Peripheral Nerve Injuries; Phosphodiesterase Inhibitors; Phosphorylation; Pyridines; Rats; Rats, Inbred Lew; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Sciatic Nerve; Spinal Cord; Xanthines

2018
Supradural inflammatory soup in awake and freely moving rats induces facial allodynia that is blocked by putative immune modulators.
    Brain research, 2017, 06-01, Volume: 1664

    Facial allodynia is a migraine symptom that is generally considered to represent a pivotal point in migraine progression. Treatment before development of facial allodynia tends to be more successful than treatment afterwards. As such, understanding the underlying mechanisms of facial allodynia may lead to a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying migraine. Migraine facial allodynia is modeled by applying inflammatory soup (histamine, bradykinin, serotonin, prostaglandin E2) over the dura. Whether glial and/or immune activation contributes to such pain is unknown. Here we tested if trigeminal nucleus caudalis (Sp5C) glial and/or immune cells are activated following supradural inflammatory soup, and if putative glial/immune inhibitors suppress the consequent facial allodynia. Inflammatory soup was administered via bilateral indwelling supradural catheters in freely moving rats, inducing robust and reliable facial allodynia. Gene expression for microglial/macrophage activation markers, interleukin-1β, and tumor necrosis factor-α increased following inflammatory soup along with robust expression of facial allodynia. This provided the basis for pursuing studies of the behavioral effects of 3 diverse immunomodulatory drugs on facial allodynia. Pretreatment with either of two compounds broadly used as putative glial/immune inhibitors (minocycline, ibudilast) prevented the development of facial allodynia, as did treatment after supradural inflammatory soup but prior to the expression of facial allodynia. Lastly, the toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) antagonist (+)-naltrexone likewise blocked development of facial allodynia after supradural inflammatory soup. Taken together, these exploratory data support that activated glia and/or immune cells may drive the development of facial allodynia in response to supradural inflammatory soup in unanesthetized male rats.

    Topics: Animals; Dura Mater; Encephalitis; Hyperalgesia; Inflammation Mediators; Macrophages; Male; Microglia; Migraine Disorders; Minocycline; Pyridines; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Trigeminal Caudal Nucleus

2017
Adolescent morphine exposure affects long-term microglial function and later-life relapse liability in a model of addiction.
    The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 2013, Jan-16, Volume: 33, Issue:3

    Adolescence in humans represents a unique developmental time point associated with increased risk-taking behavior and experimentation with drugs of abuse. We hypothesized that exposure to drugs of abuse during adolescence may increase the risk of addiction in adulthood. To test this, rats were treated with a subchronic regimen of morphine or saline in adolescence, and their preference for morphine was examined using conditioned place preference (CPP) and drug-induced reinstatement in adulthood. The initial preference for morphine did not differ between groups; however, rats treated with morphine during adolescence showed robust reinstatement of morphine CPP after drug re-exposure in adulthood. This effect was not seen in rats pretreated with a subchronic regimen of morphine as adults, suggesting that exposure to morphine specifically during adolescence increases the risk of relapse to drug-seeking behavior in adulthood. We have previously established a role for microglia, the immune cells of the brain, and immune molecules in the risk of drug-induced reinstatement of morphine CPP. Thus, we examined the role of microglia within the nucleus accumbens of these rats and determined that rats exposed to morphine during adolescence had a significant increase in Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) mRNA and protein expression specifically on microglia. Morphine binds to TLR4 directly, and this increase in TLR4 was associated with exaggerated morphine-induced TLR4 signaling and microglial activation in rats previously exposed to morphine during adolescence. These data suggest that long-term changes in microglial function, caused by adolescent morphine exposure, alter the risk of drug-induced reinstatement in adulthood.

    Topics: Age Factors; Animals; Conditioning, Operant; Disease Models, Animal; Drug-Seeking Behavior; Microglia; Minocycline; Morphine; Narcotics; Nucleus Accumbens; Opioid-Related Disorders; Pyridines; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Recurrence; Toll-Like Receptor 4

2013
Glial cell modulators attenuate methamphetamine self-administration in the rat.
    European journal of pharmacology, 2013, Feb-15, Volume: 701, Issue:1-3

    Neuroinflammation induced by activated microglia and astrocytes can be elicited by drugs of abuse. Methamphetamine administration activates glial cells and increases proinflammatory cytokine production, and there is recent evidence of a linkage between glial cell activation and drug abuse-related behavior. We have previously reported that ibudilast (AV411; 3-isobutyryl-2-isopropylpyrazolo-[1,5-a]pyridine), which inhibits phosphodiesterase (PDE) and pro-inflammatory activity, blocks reinstatement of methamphetamine-maintained responding in rats, and that ibudilast and AV1013, an amino analog of ibudilast, which has similar glial-attenuating properties but limited PDE activity, attenuate methamphetamine-induced locomotor activity and sensitization in mice. The present study's objective was to determine whether co-administered ibudilast, AV1013, or minocycline, which is a tetracycline derivative that also suppresses methamphetamine-induced glial activation, would attenuate active methamphetamine i.v. self-administration in Long-Evans hooded rats. Rats were initially trained to press a lever for 0.1mg/kg/inf methamphetamine according to a FR1 schedule during 2-h daily sessions. Once stable responding was obtained, twice daily ibudilast (1, 7.5, 10mg/kg), AV1013 (1, 10, 30mg/kg), or once daily minocycline (10, 30, 60mg/kg), or their corresponding vehicles, were given i.p. for three consecutive days during methamphetamine (0.001, 0.03, 0.1mg/kg/inf) self-administration. Ibudilast, AV1013, and minocycline all significantly (p<0.05) reduced responding maintained by 0.03mg/kg/inf methamphetamine that had maintained the highest level of infusions under vehicle conditions. These results suggest that targeting glial cells may provide a novel approach to pharmacotherapy for treating methamphetamineabuse.

    Topics: Animals; Behavior, Animal; Male; Methamphetamine; Minocycline; Neuroglia; Pyridines; Rats; Self Administration; Substance-Related Disorders

2013
Reduction of opioid withdrawal and potentiation of acute opioid analgesia by systemic AV411 (ibudilast).
    Brain, behavior, and immunity, 2009, Volume: 23, Issue:2

    Morphine-induced glial proinflammatory responses have been documented to contribute to tolerance to opioid analgesia. Here, we examined whether drugs previously shown to suppress glial proinflammatory responses can alter other clinically relevant opioid effects; namely, withdrawal or acute analgesia. AV411 (ibudilast) and minocycline, drugs with distinct mechanisms of action that result in attenuation of glial proinflammatory responses, each reduced naloxone-precipitated withdrawal. Analysis of brain nuclei associated with opioid withdrawal revealed that morphine altered expression of glial activation markers, cytokines, chemokines, and a neurotrophic factor. AV411 attenuated many of these morphine-induced effects. AV411 also protected against spontaneous withdrawal-induced hyperactivity and weight loss recorded across a 12-day timecourse. Notably, in the spontaneous withdrawal study, AV411 treatment was delayed relative to the start of the morphine regimen so to also test whether AV411 could still be effective in the face of established morphine dependence, which it was. AV411 did not simply attenuate all opioid effects, as co-administering AV411 with morphine or oxycodone caused three-to-five-fold increases in acute analgesic potency, as revealed by leftward shifts in the analgesic dose response curves. Timecourse analyses revealed that plasma morphine levels were not altered by AV411, suggestive that potentiated analgesia was not simply due to prolongation of morphine exposure or increased plasma concentrations. These data support and extend similar potentiation of acute opioid analgesia by minocycline, again providing converging lines of evidence of glial involvement. Hence, suppression of glial proinflammatory responses can significantly reduce opioid withdrawal, while improving analgesia.

    Topics: Analgesia; Analgesics, Opioid; Animals; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Brain; Bronchodilator Agents; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein; Immunohistochemistry; Injections, Intraperitoneal; Male; Minocycline; Morphine; Naloxone; Opioid-Related Disorders; Oxycodone; Pain; Pain Measurement; Pyridines; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Substance Withdrawal Syndrome; Weight Loss

2009