By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
SimplyForensic Dark SimplyForensic Dark Simplyforensic
  • Home
  • News Updates
    News Updates
    Keep up with the latest research news, updates & top news headlines in the field of Forensic Science.
    Show More
    Top News
    hero DNA mixtures new Simplyforensic
    NIST Publishes Review of DNA Mixture Interpretation Methods
    December 21, 2024
    photo 1532187863486 abf9dbad1b69 Simplyforensic
    Investigators looking for DNA Differences between identical twins
    October 16, 2022
    Towel With Blood In A Crime Scene 1 Towel With Blood In A Crime Scene 1 Simplyforensic
    Forensic Scientist Henry Lee Found Liable for Fabricating Evidence
    September 28, 2024
    Latest News
    Forensic Science News Roundup March 18, 2025
    March 19, 2025
    Bybit’s $1.4B Crypto Hack – How It Happened & What’s Next
    February 28, 2025
    Rapid DNA Evidence Now Approved for CODIS Searches
    February 13, 2025
    NIST Publishes Comprehensive Report on DNA Mixture Interpretation Methods
    December 29, 2024
  • Forensic Case Files
    Forensic Case FilesShow More
    nicholas ii and family ada90b The Imperial Royal Family of Russia Nicholas Simplyforensic
    Tsar Nicholas II and the Romanov Family: A Landmark Case Study
    May 21, 2025
    John Toms 1784 Case Torn Newspaper Evidence and Historical Crime Scene Setup Historical crime scene with torn newspaper antique pistol and candle John Toms case 1784 Simplyforensic
    The John Toms Case: How a Torn Newspaper Revolutionized Forensic Science in 1784
    April 6, 2025
    Meerut Murder Case 1 Forensic experts inspecting cement filled drum hiding crime evidence in a residential setting Simplyforensic
    Meerut Murder Case: Forensic Insights into a Gruesome Betrayal
    March 23, 2025
    Dennis Rader the BTK Killer BTK Killer aka Dannis Rader Simplyforensic
    The BTK Killer’s Fatal Mistake: How a Floppy Disk Ended a 30-Year Manhunt
    March 22, 2025
    Enrique marti vampira raval barcelona Enriqueta Martí leading a child through Barcelonas shadowy Raval district symbolizing her double life and dark crimes Simplyforensic
    The Vampire of Barcelona: The Shocking Crimes of Enriqueta Martí
    March 21, 2025
  • Blog
  • More
    • Submission Manager
    • Write for Us
    • Education & Career Guidance
    • Research & Publications
    • Study Materials
Reading: Designing less addictive opioids, through chemistry
Sign In
Font ResizerAa
SimplyforensicSimplyforensic
  • Home
  • News Updates
  • Forensic Case Files
  • Blog
  • More
Search
  • Home
  • News Updates
  • Forensic Case Files
  • Blog
  • More
    • Submission Manager
    • Write for Us
    • Education & Career Guidance
    • Research & Publications
    • Study Materials
Blow flies can be used as chemical sensors for detection of chemical warfare agents Simplyforensic

Blow Flies as Chemical Sensors for Detecting Chemical Warfare Agents

Simplyforensic
Simplyforensic
October 11, 2024
FacebookLike
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow
Have an existing account? Sign In
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
© SimplyForensic
pexels photo 208541 Simplyforensic
Simplyforensic > Blog > News & Updates > Designing less addictive opioids, through chemistry
News & Updates

Designing less addictive opioids, through chemistry

Simplyforensic
Last updated: December 24, 2024 9:50 pm
By Simplyforensic
Published: December 24, 2024
8 Min Read
Share
8 Min Read
SHARE
Highlights
  • Researchers are developing opioids that target injured tissue without affecting the brain.
  • These drugs focus on injured areas with higher acidity, reducing addiction risks.
  • Fluorine-modified opioids like fentanyl show promise in minimizing harmful side effects.
  • Lab results are promising, but clinical applications are still a work in progress.
One potential way to make opioids less addictive is to make them target injured tissue rather than the healthy brain. PM Images/Photodisk via Getty Images

Aaron W. Harrison, Austin College

What if there was a way for pain patients to get all the pain-relieving power of opioids with none of the addicting side effects?

Opioids are one of the most powerful pain medications available, but millions of Americans have struggled with prescription opioid misuse after getting hooked on the feelings of calm and euphoria they also induce. But new research suggests there may be a way to chemically tailor opioids to reduce their addictive potential.

The first wave of the opioid epidemic in the United States began in the 1990s. By 2015, approximately 11.5 million Americans were struggling with prescription opioid misuse. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that nearly 500,000 people died from opioid overdose from 1999 to 2019. Recent reports have shown that this ongoing health crisis has only intensified during the COVID-19 pandemic. The U.S. reached a record 93,000 overdose deaths in 2020, a 29% increase from the previous year.

Many people with opioid dependencies report using these drugs to relieve physical pain: Chronic pain treatment is a leading cause of opioid abuse. But there currently are no equivalent medications capable of the providing the same level of pain relief without the potential risk of addiction.

A less addictive opioid, however, could be an important tool to deal with the opioid epidemic. I’m a physical chemist interested in this problem, and my research group used computational chemistry to investigate how opioids like morphine can be redesigned to target specific pain regions without affecting the brain. https://www.youtube.com/embed/8xoOF2x0XzM?wmode=transparent&start=0 In the process of trying to develop a less addictive painkiller, researchers produced more forms of addictive opioids.

The biochemistry of opioids

There are many different classes of opioids that vary in chemical structure. However, all opioids contain the same type of chemical group that dictates their biochemical activity. Morphine, oxycodone and hydrocodone belong to the same major class of epoxymorphinan opioids and share nearly identical chemical structures.

Structures of epoxymorphinan structures
Morphine, oxycodone, and hydrocodone belong to the same class of opioids and have similar structures. Aaron Harrison, CC BY-ND

Fentanyl, on the other hand, belongs to the phenylpiperidine class of opioids and looks quite different.

Chemical structures of morphine and fentanyl
Morphine and fentanyl have different chemical structures but share a nitrogen group that undergo a similar chemical reaction in the bloodstream. Aaron Harrison, CC BY-ND

The chemical structures of these molecules will be a bit of mystery if you haven’t taken an organic chemistry class before. However, we can simplify the picture by focusing on what’s common between them. Both molecules contain a nitrogen that’s part of what’s called an amine group. This group can become positively charged via a chemical reaction that happens in water-based environments such as the bloodstream.

Morphine reaction with water to generate active opioid.
Neutrally-charged morphine undergoes a chemical reaction in water to become a positively-charged, biochemically active compound. Aaron Harrison, CC BY-ND

This positively charged structure is the biochemically active form of the opioid – it won’t have any effect on your body until it gains this positive charge. The positive charge on the nitrogen helps these drugs bind to the target site where the pain is originating and provide relief.

More Read

Aefad408 A741 430b Acac 594cc4e1215f Aefad408 A741 430b Acac 594cc4e1215f Simplyforensic
Genetic Genealogy Cold Case Dallas: Serial Rapist Sentenced to Life in Historic Forensic Breakthrough
AI-Generated Police Reports: Will AI Chatbots Hold Up in Court?
Killer of Taxi Driver Gasim Hassan Sentenced to Death
Barriers to Next-Generation Sequencing in Forensics
Discarded Cigarette Leads to Arrest in 1980 Washington Murder Case

The typical acidity level of the average person’s body provides ideal conditions for morphine and fentanyl to become positively charged. This means that nearly all of the drug that’s consumed will be biochemically active throughout the body. Whether it’s in the brain or at the site of injury, cells all over the body will feel the effects of the drug.

Making opioids less addictive

Many of the addictive qualities of opioids are due to the feelings of calm and euphoria they induce in the brain. For conditions like arthritis and wound and postoperative pain, however, these drugs need to target only the diseased or injured areas of the body to provide pain relief. The question researchers face is whether it’s possible to limit the effect of opioids to specific areas of the body without affecting the brain.

One recently proposed solution focuses on the acidity difference between injured and healthy tissue. Injured tissue is more acidic than healthy tissue due to a process known as acidosis, where lactic acid and other acidic byproducts produced by damaged tissue collect. This means that an opioid could potentially be altered to be positively charged and active only in injured tissue, while staying neutral and inactive in normal tissue. The drug would be biochemically active only at a higher acidity level than found in healthy tissue.

This theory was first explored using fentanyl. Researchers found that introducing a fluorine (F) atom near the nitrogen in the amine group can lower the acidity range in which fentanyl is active, making it less likely to be active at the normal acidity levels of the body.

Chemical structure of fluorinated fentanyl
Adding a fluorine atom to fentanyl can make it less likely to be biochemically active in healthy body tissues. Aaron Harrison

Adding fluorine to fentanyl showed increased opioid activity in the more acidic conditions of injured tissue compared to healthy tissue. This meant that the drug “turned on” only in parts of the body that needed pain relief. In addition, it showed a decrease in the severe side effects associated with opioids, like addictive potential and abnormally decreased breathing rates, while still providing pain relief.

My colleagues and I have recently extended this framework to morphine. We showed that similar fluorine substitutions can also adjust morphine’s active acidity range to specifically target injured tissue. Given that molecules in the same class of opioids as morphine share similar structures, we believe this approach would also work in other opioids like hydrocodone and oxycodone.

Chemical structure of fluorinated morphine
Adding a fluorine atom to morphine can make it less likely to be biochemically active in healthy body tissues. Aaron Harrison, CC BY-ND

Effectively treating pain without putting patients at risk for addiction remains a significant problem in health care. This approach has been tested only in lab settings and might not be in pharmacies for some time, if ever. But chemically altering existing opioids is a promising avenue towards developing drugs that alleviate pain without causing addiction.

[Understand new developments in science, health and technology, each week. Subscribe to The Conversation’s science newsletter.]

Aaron W. Harrison, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Austin College

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

TAGGED:Forensic ChemistryOpioids
Share This Article
Facebook Copy Link
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
BySimplyforensic
Follow:
Forensic Analyst by Profession. With Simplyforensic.com striving to provide a one-stop-all-in-one platform with accessible, reliable, and media-rich content related to forensic science. Education background in B.Sc.Biotechnology and Master of Science in forensic science.
Previous Article 577312 DNA Strand Simplyforensic Forensic Scientists Patented the Design of First Machine Learning Approach to Forensic DNA Analysis
Next Article preview16 Simplyforensic How does the Pegasus spyware work, and is my phone at risk?
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Deepfakes And Their Impact On Society The Scene Deepfakes And Their Impact On Society The Scene Simplyforensic

The Deepfake Dilemma: Understanding the Technology Behind Artificial Media Manipulation

Simplyforensic
Simplyforensic
August 21, 2024
FacebookLike
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow

Trending

Nanomaterials in Forensics: Revolutionary Tools for Crime Scene Analysis

Explore how nanotechnology revolutionizes forensics by enhancing evidence detection, DNA analysis, and trace evidence visualization…

December 21, 2024

Forensic Genomics: Blazing New Trails in Solving Cold Case

Explore how advances in forensic genomics and genetic testing are revolutionizing the resolution of cold…

July 13, 2024

Forensic Art

Forensic art is referred to applying artistic skills such as drawing and image modifications to…

July 9, 2022
Forensic DNA Analysis

DNA Myths Busted! Separating Fact from Fiction in Forensic Genetics

DNA Myths Busted Separating Fact from Fiction in Forensic Genetics DNA Myths Busted Separating Fact from Fiction in Forensic Genetics Simplyforensic

Separate fact from fiction in the world of forensic genetics. Discover the surprising truths behind common DNA evidence myths.

Simplyforensic
June 5, 2025

Your may also like!

Ancient DNA Unraveling the Mystery of Chinese Emperor Wu Ancient DNA Unraveling the Mystery of Chinese Emperor Wu Simplyforensic
Forensic DNA AnalysisNews & Updates

Ancient DNA: Unraveling the Mystery of Chinese Emperor Wu

Simplyforensic
April 3, 2024
DNA Laboratory A Modern Forensic Science Laboratory With Advanced Equipment A Dna Double Helix Structure Prominently Displayed Various High Tech Forensic Tools On Simplyforensic
News & Updates

2022 Report: Ireland’s DNA Database’s Significant Growth and Its Impact on Forensic Science

Simplyforensic
January 3, 2025
bites Simplyforensic
Forensic OdontologyNews & Updates

Bitemark Analysis Not Supported by Sufficient Data – NIST

Simplyforensic
September 12, 2024
working in laboratory picture id506712124 min Simplyforensic
News & UpdatesResearch & Publications

Exploring the Use of Household Dust in Forensic Investigations

Simplyforensic
April 5, 2023

Our website stores cookies on your computer. They allow us to remember you and help personalize your experience with our site.

Read our privacy policy for more information.

Quick Links

  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us
Contribute to Simply Forensic

Socials

Follow US
© 2025 SimplyForensic. All rights reserved.

Login

or
Create New Account
Lost password?
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?

Not a member? Sign Up