Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    SciTechDaily
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth
    • Health
    • Physics
    • Science
    • Space
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube RSS
    SciTechDaily
    Home»Health»Natural Painkiller: New Research Advances the Treatment of Chronic Pain
    Health

    Natural Painkiller: New Research Advances the Treatment of Chronic Pain

    By Luxembourg Institute of HealthJune 5, 20218 Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email Reddit
    Pinwheel Flower
    Pinwheel flower. Credit: LIH

    LIH and RTI International put forward the mode of action of natural painkiller conolidine, and develop new molecule with enhanced pharmacological properties.

    Building on their previous findings, scientists from the Immuno-Pharmacology and Interactomics group at the Department of Infection and Immunity of the Luxembourg Institute of Health (LIH), in collaboration with the Center for Drug Discovery at RTI International (RTI), a nonprofit research institute, have demonstrated that conolidine, a natural painkiller derived from the pinwheel flower and traditionally used in Chinese medicine, interacts with the newly identified opioid receptor ACKR3/CXCR7 that regulates opioid peptides naturally produced in the brain. The researchers also developed a synthetic analog of conolidine, RTI-5152-12, which displays an even greater activity on the receptor. These findings, which were published on June 3rd in the prestigious international journal ‘Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy’ (Nature Publishing Group), further advance the understanding of pain regulation and open alternative therapeutic avenues for the treatment of chronic pain.

    Opioid peptides are small proteins that mediate pain relief and emotions, including euphoria, anxiety, stress and depression, by interacting with four classical receptors (“molecular switches”) in the brain. Dr Andy Chevigné, Head of Immuno-Pharmacology and Interactomics, and his team had previously identified the chemokine receptor ACKR3 as a novel fifth atypical opioid receptor, with high affinity for various natural opioids (Nature Communications, Meyrath et al. 2020). ACKR3 functions as a ‘scavenger’ that ‘traps’ the secreted opioids and prevents them from binding to the classical receptors, thereby dampening their analgesic activity and acting as a regulator of the opioid system.

    Conolidine Block ACKR3 to Boost Natural Pain Relief

    In the current study, the researchers identified ACKR3 as the most responsive target for conolidine, an alkaloid with analgesic properties, by screening over 240 receptors for their ability to be activated or inhibited by this molecule.

    “We confirmed that conolidine binds to the newly identified opioid receptor ACKR3, while showing no affinity for the other four classical opioid receptors. By doing so, conolidine blocks ACKR3 and prevents it from trapping the naturally secreted opioids, which in turn increases their availability for interacting with classical receptors. We believe that this molecular mechanism is at the basis of the beneficial effects of this traditionally used medicine on pain relief,” said Dr Martyna Szpakowska, first author of the publication and scientist within the LIH Immuno-Pharmacology and Interactomics group.

    In parallel to characterizing the interaction between conolidine and ACKR3, the two teams went a step further. The scientists developed a modified variant of conolidine — which they called “RTI-5152-12” — which exclusively binds to ACKR3 with an even higher affinity. Like LIH383, a patented compound previously developed by Dr. Andy Chevigné and his team, RTI-5152-12 is postulated to increase the levels of opioid peptides that bind to classical opioid receptors in the brain, resulting in heightened painkilling activity. The LIH-RTI research teams established a collaboration agreement and filed a joint patent application in December 2020.

    “The discovery of ACKR3 as a target of conolidine further emphasizes the role of this newly discovered receptor in modulating the opioid system and, consequently, in regulating our perception of pain,” said Dr. Chevigné, corresponding author of the publication and leader of the LIH Immuno-Pharmacology and Interactomics group.

    A Safer Alternative to Traditional Opioids?

    “Our findings could also mean that conolidine, and potentially also its synthetic analogs, could carry new hope for the treatment of chronic pain and depression, particularly given the fact that conolidine was reported to trigger fewer of the detrimental side-effects — namely addiction, tolerance and respiratory problems — associated with commonly used opioid drugs like morphine and fentanyl.”

    “Our work could therefore set the basis for the development of a new class of drugs with alternative mechanism of action, thereby contributing to tackling the public health crisis linked to the increasing misuse of and addiction to opioid drugs,” says Dr. Ojas Namjoshi, co-corresponding author of the publication and lead scientist on the study at RTI.

    “Once again, we have built on the findings of our excellent fundamental research and translated them into applications with the potential of tangibly improving clinical outcomes for patients,” said Prof Markus Ollert, Director of the LIH Department of Infection and Immunity. “We are grateful to the Luxembourg National Research Fund, the Ministry of Higher Education and Research and the European Commission for the generous support.”
    Funding and research teams

    This study was supported by funds from the Luxembourg Institute of Health (LIH), the Luxembourg National Research Fund (Pathfinder “LIH383,” INTER/FWO “Nanokine” grant 15/10358798, INTER/FNRS grants 20/15084569, PoC “Megakine” 19/14209621, PRIDE 11012546 “NextImmune” and 14254520 “I2TRON”), F.R.S.-FNRS-Télévie (grants 7.4593.19, 7.4529.19 and 7.8504.20) and by RTI International Internal Research and Development Funds (awarded to O. Namjoshi). M. Meyrath and C. Palmer are Luxembourg National Research Fund PhD fellows (grants AFR-3004509 and AFR-14616593). C. Palmer is part of the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions – Innovative Training Networks ONCORNET2.0 “ONCOgenic Receptor Network of Excellence and Training” (MSCA-ITN-2020-ETN). The authors wish to thank Manuel Counson for technical assistance in binding competition experiments.

    Reference: “The natural analgesic conolidine targets the newly identified opioid scavenger ACKR3/CXCR7” by Martyna Szpakowska, Ann M. Decker, Max Meyrath, Christie B. Palmer, Bruce E. Blough, Ojas A. Namjoshi and Andy Chevigné, 2 June 2021, Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy.
    DOI: 10.1038/s41392-021-00548-w

    The study was performed in close collaboration with the Center for Drug Discovery of RTI International (USA).

    About the Luxembourg Institute of Health: Research dedicated to life

    The Luxembourg Institute of Health (LIH) is a public research organization at the forefront of biomedical sciences. With its strong expertise in population health, oncology, infection and immunity as well as storage and handling of biological samples, its research activities impact on people’s health. At LIH, devoted scientists investigate disease mechanisms to develop new diagnostics, innovative therapies and effective tools to implement personalized medicine.

    About the Department of Infection and Immunity

    LIH’s Department of Infection and Immunity is a basic clinical-translational research entity aiming at understanding the complex mechanisms of infectious and inflammatory disease processes to enable new ways to diagnose, prevent and cure human diseases. Building on a highly interdisciplinary research environment, the research strategy of the Department of Infection and Immunity focuses on experimental discovery and validation, bridging to clinical application and technology development to address major unsolved medical needs in the areas of immune-mediated inflammation (such as in allergy, asthma, autoimmunity), cancer and infectious diseases (COVID-19, AIDS, measles and rubella virus infection, amongst others).

    About RTI international

    RTI International is an independent, nonprofit research institute dedicated to improving the human condition. Clients rely on us to answer questions that demand an objective and multidisciplinary approach—one that integrates expertise across the social and laboratory sciences, engineering, and international development. We believe in the promise of science, and we are inspired every day to deliver on that promise for the good of people, communities, and businesses around the world.

    Never miss a breakthrough: Join the SciTechDaily newsletter.
    Follow us on Google and Google News.

    Biochemistry Chronic Pain Molecular Biology Neuroscience Pharmaceuticals Popular
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit

    Related Articles

    Antipsychotic Drug Opens New Pathway To Beat Chronic Pain

    The Hunger Games: Scientists Uncover the Secret of the Hunger Switch in the Brain

    Scientists Discover a Psychedelic-Like Drug Without the Hallucinogenic Side Effects

    Breaking COVID-19’s “Clutch” to Stop Its Spread: Small Molecule Targets SARS-CoV-2 RNA for Destruction

    Lithium in Public Drinking Water May Have an Anti-suicidal Effect – “Magic Ion” Has Potential to Improve Community Mental Health

    Compounds Identified That Halt COVID-19 Virus Replication by Targeting Key Viral Enzyme

    Century-Old Scientific Debate Settled: Anesthesia’s Effect on Consciousness Solved

    Supposedly Pure Human Blood Serum Was Tested – Here’s What Researchers Actually Found

    Researchers Find a New Target to Treat a Wide Spectrum of Cancers

    8 Comments

    1. Harro Linke on June 6, 2021 1:49 pm

      Great article LUXEMBOURG INSTITUTE OF HEALTH. Thanks for your post

      Reply
    2. Bill Forrest on June 8, 2021 7:33 am

      My question is will using this product help me with eliminating the Norco I take daily?

      Reply
    3. Kenneth Trent on June 12, 2021 3:10 pm

      What is this stuff and where do you get it at

      Reply
    4. Dawn on June 13, 2021 10:03 am

      I’m interested in this and trying the product after reading your article on it, I have chronic pain very bad, I have many health issues in which I need more help for the pain so I’m able to to alot more. Where can someone buy this product to try it??
      Thank you for this article and the explanation of the product and what it does and whom founded this. I’m hoping it becomes a great thing for many people..
      Dawn

      Reply
    5. Jennifer Goldberg on June 13, 2021 9:36 pm

      When will this be available,I would love to give it a try for my severe chronic low back pain? It sounds like a perfect breakthrough.

      Reply
    6. Robert D Woods on June 14, 2021 10:37 pm

      I stl the juice from a poppy a natural pain killer.

      Reply
    7. Maria Stoddard on June 18, 2021 7:55 pm

      Please advise how to order this product. I live with excruciating pain daily after 5. Surgeries on both hips.

      Reply
    8. Marilyn Thomas on July 14, 2023 8:16 am

      where can I buy conolidine. I suffer from chronic back pain and foot pain. I would like to try this product to see if it can help me

      Reply
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • YouTube

    Don't Miss a Discovery

    Subscribe for the Latest in Science & Tech!

    Trending News

    Scientists May Have Found the Key to Jupiter and Saturn’s Moon Mystery

    Scientists Uncover Brain Changes That Link Pain to Depression

    Saunas May Do More Than Raise Body Temperature – They Activate Your Immune System

    Exercise in a Pill? Metformin Shows Surprising Effects in Cancer Patients

    Hidden Oceans of Magma Could Be Protecting Alien Life

    New Study Challenges Alzheimer’s Theories: It’s Not Just About Plaques

    Artificial Sweeteners May Harm Future Generations, Study Suggests

    Splashdown! NASA Artemis II Returns From Record-Breaking Moon Mission

    Follow SciTechDaily
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
    • Pinterest
    • Newsletter
    • RSS
    SciTech News
    • Biology News
    • Chemistry News
    • Earth News
    • Health News
    • Physics News
    • Science News
    • Space News
    • Technology News
    Recent Posts
    • This Strange Material Can Turn Superconductivity on and off Like a Switch
    • Scientists Discover Game-Changing New Way To Treat High Cholesterol
    • Breakthrough Drug Delays Rheumatoid Arthritis for Years After Treatment Ends
    • This Small Change to Your Exercise Routine Could Be the Secret to Living Longer
    • Physicists Discover a Strange New Kind of One-Dimensional Particle
    Copyright © 1998 - 2026 SciTechDaily. All Rights Reserved.
    • Science News
    • About
    • Contact
    • Editorial Board
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.