Chronic but not acute morphine exposure reversibly impairs spike generation and repetitive firing in a functionally distinct subpopulation of orexin neurons
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Orexin (hypocretin) neuropeptides regulate numerous essential functions including sleep/wake state stability and reward processing. Orexin synthesizing neurons respond to drug cues and undergo structural changes following persistent drug exposure. Post-mortem brains from opioid users, and opioid-treated rodents have orexin somata that become ∼20 % smaller and ∼50% more numerous and are postulated to promote hyper-motivation for drug-seeking though increased orexin release. Biophysical considerations suggest that decreased soma size should increase cellular excitability, however the impact of chronic opioids on firing ability, which drives peptide release, has not been explored. To test this, we assessed the intrinsic electrophysiological properties of orexin neurons by whole-cell recordings in slices from male orexin-EGFP mice treated by daily morphine or saline injections for two weeks. Paradoxically, we found that while daily morphine decreased average soma size, it impaired excitability in a subpopulation of orexin neurons identified by electrophysiological criteria as “H-type”, while entirely sparing “D-type” neurons. This impairment was manifest by smaller, broader action potentials, variable firing and a downscaling of firing gain. These adaptations required more than a single morphine dose and recovered, along with soma size, after four weeks of passive withdrawal. Taken together, these observations indicate that daily opioid exposure differentially impacts H-type orexin neurons and predicts that the ability of these neurons to encode synaptic inputs into spike trains and to release neuropeptides becomes impaired in conjunction with opioid dependence.
Significance Statement
Orexin peptide signaling sustains motivation for opioid and cocaine seeking and chronic use upregulates orexin peptides and induces structural changes consistent with enhanced orexin release. However, the impact of chronic drug exposure on the ability of orexin neurons to fire action potentials which drive peptide release has not been explored. Paradoxically, we found that two weeks of daily morphine exposure selectively and reversibly impaired action potential firing in a distinct subpopulation of orexin neurons (H-cells). These findings further support a functional dichotomy among orexin neurons and imply that the ability of H-cells to encode input signals and release neuropeptides becomes impaired during development of opioid dependence.