Dopamine systems are intimately involved with opioid actions. Pharmacological studies suggest an important modulatory effect of dopamine and Its receptors on opioid analgesia. We have now examined these interactions in a knock-out model in which the dopamine(2) (D-2), receptor has been disrupted. Loss of D-2 receptors, enhances, in a dose-dependent manner, the analgesic actions of the mu analgesic morphine, the kappa (1) agonist U50,488H and the kappa (3) analgesic naloxone, benzoylhydrazone. The responses to the delta opioid analgesic [D-Pen(2),D-Pen(5)]enkephalin were unaffected in the knock-out animals. Loss of D-2 receptors also potentiated, spinal orphanin FQ/nociceptin analgesia. Antisense studies using a probe targeting the D-2 receptor revealed results similar to those observed in the knock-out model. The modulatory actions of D-2 receptors were independent of a receptor systems because the sigma agonist (+)-pentazocine lowered opioid analgesia in all mice, including the D-2 knock-out group. Thus, dopamine D-2 receptors represent an additional, significant modulatory system that inhibits analgesic responses to mu and kappa opioids.