Functional dissociation of mu opioid receptor signaling and endocytosis:
implications for the biology of opiate tolerance and addiction
by
Whistler JL, Chuang HH, Chu P, Jan LY, von Zastrow M
Department of Cellular
and Molecular Pharmacology,
University of California,
San Francisco, 94143,
USA.
Neuron 1999 Aug; 23(4):737-46
ABSTRACT
Opiate analgesia, tolerance, and addiction are mediated by drug-induced
activation of the mu opioid receptor. A fundamental question in addiction biology
is why exogenous opiate drugs have a high liability for inducing tolerance and
addiction while native ligands do not. Studies indicate that highly addictive
opiate drugs such as morphine are deficient in their ability to induce the desensitization
and endocytosis of receptors. Here, we demonstrate that this regulatory mechanism
reveals an independent functional property of opiate drugs that can be distinguished
from previously established agonist properties. Moreover, this property correlates
with agonist propensity to promote physiological tolerance, suggesting a fundamental
revision of our understanding of the role of receptor endocytosis in the biology
of opiate drug action and addiction.
Mu
Heroin
SOD mu
Tolerance
Naloxonazine
Receptor subtypes
Morphine/verapamil
Dynorphin
and dopamine
Mu opioid receptor subtypes
Genes, pharmacology and mu
The mu opioid receptor: review
Depression,
opioids and the HPA
Kappa upregulation and
addiction
Opioids, goldfish and the
giant toad
Social life and the mu opioid receptors
Opioids, depression
and learned helplessness
Happiness, sadness and mu-opioid neurotransmission

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