Pubdate: Wed, 10 May 2000 Source: Reuters Copyright: 2000 Reuters Limited. Author: Patricia Reaney SCIENTISTS SEPARATE PAIN, PLEASURE EFFECTS OF OPIATES LONDON - Drugs that block the effects of a gene could prevent opiates from becoming addictive while still retaining their painkilling properties, British and Spanish scientists said Wednesday. They discovered that the gene essential for the euphoria that keeps addicts hooked on heroin or morphine can be shut off in mice without changing the drug's analgesic effects -- possibly opening a new avenue for treating addiction. ``Opiates are both the best analgesics we have, as well as drugs producing euphoria leading to addiction,'' Stephen Hunt, of University College in London, told Reuters. ``What we've shown is that you can knock out one particular gene, the substance P receptor gene, and you can disassociate these effects. So analgesia is retained intact whereas the pleasurable effects of opiates are apparently abolished.'' The research, published in the science journal Nature, could have important implications in understanding drug addiction and provide a new tool for researchers. ``This could give us a way of blocking the addictive effects of opiates while leaving the pain-controlling aspects intact,'' Hunt said in a telephone interview. ``It gives us, for the first time, a really good opportunity -- a signpost -- to the molecular events underlying opiate addiction.'' But he added that the findings do not apply to cocaine, suggesting that opiates act on the brain to produce an addictive effect in a different way. Drug Target For New Antidepressants Scientists are already using substance P as a target for new compounds to treat depression which could challenge the dominance of Prozac. Hunt and researchers at the Miguel Hernandez University in Alicante, who contributed to the research, believe the findings could lead to the development of novel drugs that antagonize the actions of substance P. That could potentially reduce the severity of drug withdrawal and prevent relapse. ``It is the first novel target for addiction, for anxiety and depression, that has been around for many years. I think that is what makes it very exciting,'' Hunt said. ``It could lead to reorientation and to some unexpected findings in how we deal with things like addiction.'' The researchers used transgenic mice in which the gene for substance P was knocked out, or silenced. They measured the pleasurable impact on the mice by giving them a choice between boxes containing morphine or cocaine. The so-called knockout mice invariably preferred the cocaine box and showed no interest in the morphine. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea