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Article Dans Une Revue European Journal of Pharmacology Année : 2004

No evidence for G-protein-coupled epsilon receptor in the brain of triple opioid receptor knockout mouse

Résumé

Pharmacological approaches have defined the epsilon receptor as a beta-endorphin-preferring opioid receptor, described in rat vas deferens and in brain of several species. Only three opioid receptors-mu, delta and kappa-have been cloned and the existence of this additional subtype as a distinct protein remains controversial. Recently, the mouse brain epsilon receptor was detected in a G protein activation assay, as mediating residual beta-endorphin activity following pharmacological blockade of mu, delta and kappa receptors. To clarify whether this site is independent from mu, delta and kappa receptors, we performed beta-endorphin-induced [(35)S]GTPgammaS binding using mice lacking these three receptors (triple knockout mice). We tested both pons-medulla and whole brain preparations. beta-Endorphin strongly stimulated [(35)S]GTPgammaS binding in wild-type membranes but had no detectable effect in membranes from triple knockout mice. We conclude that the brain epsilon site involves mu, delta and/or kappa receptors, possibly coupled to nonclassical G proteins.

Dates et versions

hal-04133451 , version 1 (19-06-2023)

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Citer

Candice Contet, Audrey Matifas, Brigitte Kieffer. No evidence for G-protein-coupled epsilon receptor in the brain of triple opioid receptor knockout mouse. European Journal of Pharmacology, 2004, 492 (2-3), pp.131-136. ⟨10.1016/j.ejphar.2004.03.056⟩. ⟨hal-04133451⟩
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