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1.
We have developed a method that is based on two HPLC systems and permits the separation of endogenous opioid peptides in tissue extracts. The individual peptides are bioassayed on the mouse isolated vas deferens; naloxone (100 nM) ensures opioid specificity. In the myenteric plexus-longitudinal muscle preparation of the guinea-pig small intestine, the tissue content of prodynorphin-derived peptides is lower than those of proenkephalin-derived peptides. No beta-endorphin was detected. Of the prodynorphin fragments, alpha-neoendorphin, beta-neoendorphin, dynorphin A(1-8), and dynorphin B are present in equimolar concentrations (12-15 pmol/g) whereas the tissue content of dynorphin A is only 0.8 pmol/g. Processing of proenkephalin leads to at least six opioid peptides. The tissue contents of [Leu5]enkephalin, [Met5]enkephalyl-Arg-Gly-Leu, and [Met5]enkephalyl-Arg-Phe are 90-100 pmol/g and the content of [Met5]enkephalin is 405 pmol/g. BAM-18 and [Met5]enkephalyl-Arg-Arg-Val-NH2 are present in much lower concentrations, 24 and 5 pmol/g, respectively. Although present in low amounts, BAM-18 and [Met5]-enkephalyl-Arg-Arg-Val-NH2 have high affinity for the mu-opioid binding site and to a lesser extent for the kappa-site; this binding profile differs from that of the other proenkephalin fragments all of which have high affinities for the mu- and delta-sites.  相似文献   

2.
The rabbit cerebellum has been shown to contain significant quantities of opioid receptors consisting of both mu- and kappa-subtypes. To determine the nature of the endogenous opioid ligands in this tissue, extracts from rabbit cerebellum were separated by various chromatography techniques and fractions were assayed initially for opioid peptides with a radioimmunoassay capable of detecting all peptides with an amino-terminal Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe sequence. This sequence is common to all mammalian opioid peptides and is critical for recognition by all known opioid receptors. Each of the three immunoreactive opioid peptide peaks detected was purified to homogeneity and subjected to amino acid composition and sequence analysis. One peak was analyzed further by mass spectrometry. This identified the major opioid peptides in the cerebellum as [Met5]enkephalin, [Leu5]enkephalin, and heptapeptide [Met5]enkephalyl-Arg6-Phe7. The comprehensiveness of this initial detection scheme in identifying biologically active opioid peptides was substantiated through subsequent analysis. Using specific radioimmunoassays for representative opioid peptides of the three opioid systems currently known, no other peptides of either the proenkephalin, proopiomelanocortin, or prodynorphin series were detected in any appreciable amounts. Collectively, these results are consistent with the position that rabbit cerebellar opioids are derived from proenkephalin. However, given that no appreciable quantities of either [Met5]enkephalyl-Arg6-Arg7-Val8-NH2 (metorphamide) or [Met5]enkephalyl-Arg6-Gly7-Leu8 were detected suggests that rabbit proenkephalin may have a slightly altered sequence and/or is differentially processed relative to other mammalian species studied.  相似文献   

3.
Regional distribution of metorphamide in rat and guinea pig brain   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A specific radioimmunoassay was developed for metorphamide, an endogenous, amidated opioid octapeptide, originally isolated from bovine brain and human pheochromocytoma tissues. The radioimmunoassay was used to determine the concentration of immunoreactive metorphamide in extracts from dissected regions of rat and guinea pig brain. Radioimmunoassay interfacing with Sephadex gel filtration and reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography confirmed that the immunoreactive substance measured corresponded to authentic metorphamide. Metorphamide was found to be widely distributed in brain regions from both species. However, the concentrations of immunoreactive metorphamide in regions from guinea pig brain were up to 5 times higher than the concentrations of immunoreactive metorphamide in rat brain regions. The results suggest that metorphamide is a specific processing product from proenkephalin in rodent brain.  相似文献   

4.
We have used antisera directed towards eight different portions of the proenkephalin molecule to examine the processing rates and patterns of proenkephalin-derived peptides in chromaffin cell cultures in the presence and absence of reserpine. Reserpine treatment produced profound effects on the molecular weight profile of nearly all enkephalin-containing peptides. Increased production of low molecular weight immunoreactive [Met5]enkephalin, [Leu5]enkephalin, [Met5]enkephalin-Arg6-Gly7-Leu8, and [Met5]enkephalin-Arg6-Phe7 was observed in reserpine-treated cultures; immunoreactivity corresponding to several intermediate sized enkephalin-containing peptides such as Peptide B and the high molecular weight [Met5]enkephalin-Arg6-Gly7-Leu8 immunoreactive peptide was decreased. The production of two amidated opioid peptides, amidorphin and metorphamide, was greatly accelerated in the presence of reserpine. The increased levels of low molecular weight enkephalins could not be accounted for by assuming decreased basal release. These results indicate that reserpine treatment is able to increase the extent of post-translational processing of proenkephalin within chromaffin cells.  相似文献   

5.
Types of opioid receptors: relation to antinociception   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The endogenous opioid peptides are derived from three large precursors. Pro-opiocortin and proenkephalin yield [Met]enkephalin, carboxy-extended [Met]enkephalins and [Leu]enkephalin. The fragments of prodynorphin are all carboxy-extended [Leu]enkephalins. Three approaches are of importance for an analysis of the physiological functions of the different endogenous opioid peptides. First, since these peptides interact with more than one of the mu-, delta- and kappa-binding sites and thus with their receptors, it is necessary to synthesize peptides or non-peptides, which bind to only one of the sites. As far as narcotic analgesics are concerned, morphine fulfils these conditions since it interacts almost exclusively with the mu-receptor. Secondly, antagonists are required that are selective for only one of the opioid receptors, even when used in high concentrations. Finally, it is important to find circumscribed areas in the nervous system that possess only one type of opioid receptor. It is now known that in the rabbit cerebellum the opioid receptors are almost exclusively of the mu-type whereas in the guinea-pig cerebellum they are almost exclusively of the kappa-type.  相似文献   

6.
Physiological release of endogenous opioids in guinea pig hippocampal slices was detected in an in vitro competition binding assay using [3H]U69,593, a kappa 1-selective radioligand. Veratridine-induced opioid release caused a decrease in [3H]U69,593 binding that was blocked by either tetrodotoxin addition or the removal of calcium from the incubation buffer. Focal electrical stimulation of opioid peptide-containing afferent pathways resulted in a decrease in [3H]U69,593 binding, whereas stimulation of a major afferent lacking endogenous opioid immunoreactivity had no effect. The addition of 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione blocked the reduction in [3H]U69,593 binding caused by perforant path stimulation, but not the reduction caused by mossy fiber stimulation, suggesting that the primary source of endogenous kappa ligands was likely to be the dentate granule cells. Antisera against dynorphin A(1-8) or dynorphin B peptides inhibited the effects of mossy fiber stimulation in the [3H]U69,593 displacement assay. Antisera against other prodynorphin- and proenkephalin-derived opioid peptides had no effect. As shown by receptor autoradiography, the distribution of kappa 1 binding sites was limited to the molecular layer of the dentate gyrus and the presubiculum region of temporal hippocampal slices. These results indicate that prodynorphin-derived opioids released under physiological conditions from the mossy fibers act at kappa 1 receptors in the guinea pig dentate gyrus.  相似文献   

7.
Our observations that opioid peptides have direct effects on islet insulin secretion and liver glucose production prompted a search for endogenous opiates and their receptors in these peripheral tissues. Mu-, delta- and kappa-receptor-active opiates were demonstrated in brain, pancreas and liver extracts by displacement studies using selective ligands for the three opiate receptor subtypes [( 3H][D-Ala2,MePhe4,Gly5-ol]enkephalin, [3H][D-Ala2,D-Leu5]enkephalin and [3H]dynorphin respectively). Receptor-active opiates in brain extracts exhibited a stronger preference for delta-opiate-receptor sites than for mu and kappa sites. Pancreatic extract opiates demonstrated a similar activity at mu and delta sites, but substantially less at kappa sites. Liver extracts displayed similar selectivity for all three sites. The affinities of the receptor-active opiates for mu-, delta- and kappa-receptor subtypes displayed a rank order of potency: brain much greater than pancreas greater than liver. Total immunoreactive beta-endorphin and [Met5]enkephalin levels in liver and hepatocytes were greater than those in brain. Immunoreactive [Met5]enkephalin levels in pancreas were similar to, but beta-endorphin levels were substantially higher than, those in brain. Delta and kappa opiate-binding sites of high affinity were identified in crude membrane preparations of islets of Langerhans, but no specific opiate-binding sites could be demonstrated in liver membrane preparations. Immunoreactive dynorphin and beta-endorphin were demonstrated by immunogold labelling in rat pancreatic islet cells. No positive staining of liver sections for opioids was observed. These results suggest that the tissue content of opiate-receptor-active compounds in the pancreas and the liver is very significant and could contribute to the regulation of normal blood glucose levels.  相似文献   

8.
In seminal vesicles, the organ producing most of seminal plasma in the bovine species, the pro-opiomelanocortin and the proenkephalin genes are transcribed and translated, and their translation products processed into opioid peptides, which are secreted into the seminal plasma. By using a micro-organ preparation of seminal vesicles we found that, after 20 h of incubation with labelled methionine, a multiplicity of opioids was produced. Among these, [Met]enkephalin and beta-endorphin were positively identified, whereas in the newly formed secretion only [Met]enkephalin was detected. This may be correlated to the finding that the concentration of beta-endorphin in an extract of seminal plasma was one order of magnitude lower than that of [Leu]enkephalin and [Met]enkephalin. These findings expand the picture of the presence of opioid peptides in the male reproductive tract, indicating that they should have a role(s) in the physiology of reproduction, not only in the hypothalamus-pituitary-gonadal axis, determining the reproductive potential, but also in the so-termed sex accessory glands, determining the actual events leading to reproduction. To our knowledge this is also the first case studied of opioid peptides produced as exocrine hormones.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

The three endogenous opioid precursors of almost 30000 Da are pro-opiocortin, proenkephalin and prodynorphin. Pro-opiocortin contains β-endorphin, melanotropins and ACTH. Proenkephalin yields one [Leu5] enkephalin, three [Met5] enkephalins, one [Met5] enkephalyl-Arg-Arg-Val-NH2 (metorphamide or adrenorphin), one [Met5] enkephalyl-Arg-Gly-Leu and one [Met5] enkephalyl-Arg-Phe. [Leu5] enkephalin is common to all fragments of prodynorphin; its carboxyl extension by Arg-Lys leads to α- and β-neo-endorphin and its carboxyl extension by Arg-Arg gives two dynorphins A and B of 17 and 13 amino acids, respectively. Another endogenous peptide is dynorphin A (1-8). The three main opioid binding sites are μ, δ and ?. Their analysis has been facilitated by the synthesis of analogues of peptides and non-peptide compounds, which have selective agonist or antagonist action at only one site. The various physiological roles of the three types of the opiate receptor have so far not been sufficiently investigated.  相似文献   

10.
Mesolimbic dopaminergic neurotransmission is modulated by dynorphin peptides binding to kappa-opioid receptors. The interaction between dynorphin and dopamine systems makes the kappa-opioid receptor a potential drug discovery target for the development of therapeutic agents for schizophrenia and drug abuse. This study reports the specificity and parameters of [3H]U69593 binding in the insular cortex, a representative corticolimbic area of the human brain. The results demonstrate that the radioligand [3H]U69593 labels a single population of receptors in human insular cortex with an affinity in the low nanomolar range. The pharmacological profile for inhibition of [3H]U69593 binding was determined in this brain region using drugs known to bind to mu, kappa and delta opioid receptors. The results show that kappa-opioid selective agonists and antagonists inhibit binding of this ligand in human brain with comparable affinities and rank order as previously described for rat and guinea pig brain and the cloned kappa1-opioid receptor subtype.  相似文献   

11.
Although orphanin FQ/nociceptin (OFQ/N) receptors are a member of the opioid receptor family of receptors, they bind traditional opioids with very poor affinity. We now demonstrate that mu opioid receptors can physically associate with OFQ/N receptors, resulting in a complex with a unique binding selectivity profile. Immunoprecipitation of epitope-tagged OFQ/N receptors co-precipitates mu receptors. When the two receptors were co-expressed in CHO cells, [3H]OFQ/N retained its high binding affinity for its receptor. However, co-expression of the two receptors increased by up to 250-fold the affinity of a series of opioids in [3H]OFQ/N binding assays. This enhanced affinity was limited to agonists with high affinity for mu receptors. Selective kappa(1) and delta opioids did not lower binding. Despite the dramatic increase in affinity for the opioid agonists in co-expressing cells, the opioid antagonists naloxone and diprenorphine failed to compete [3H]OFQ/N binding.  相似文献   

12.
Aldrich JV  Zheng QI  Murray TF 《Chirality》2001,13(3):125-129
Analogs of the opioid peptide [D-Ala8]dynorphin A-(1-11)NH2 containing optically pure (R)- and (S)-2-aminotetralin-2-carboxylic acid (Atc) in position 4 were synthesized and evaluated for opioid receptor affinity. These peptides are the first reported dynorphin A analogs containing a conformationally constrained amino acid in place of the important aromatic residue Phe4. By incorporating resolved Atc isomers, the opioid receptor affinity and the stereochemistry of the constrained residue could be unambiguously correlated. Both Dyn A analogs containing Atc in position 4 retained nanomolar affinity for kappa and mu opioid receptors. Unexpectedly the peptide containing (R)-Atc, corresponding to a conformationally constrained D-Phe analog, displaying higher affinity for both kappa and mu receptors than the peptide containing (S)-Atc. In contrast [D-Phe4,D-Ala8]Dyn A-(1-11)NH2 exhibited significantly lower affinity for kappa and mu receptors than the parent peptide, as expected. Conformational restriction of the Phe4 sidechain or incorporation of D-Phe in position 4 had the largest effect on delta receptor affinity, yielding compounds with negligible affinity for these receptors. Thus, there appear to be distinctly different structural requirements for this residue for kappa vs. delta receptors, and it is possible to completely distinguish between these two receptors by changing a single residue in Dyn A.  相似文献   

13.
N A Sharif  J Hughes 《Peptides》1989,10(3):499-522
The opioid peptides, [3H]DAGO and [3H]DPDPE, bound to rat and guinea pig brain homogenates with a high, nanomolar affinity and to a high density of mu and delta receptors, respectively. [3H]DAGO binding to mu receptors was competitively inhibited by unlabelled opioids with the following rank order of potency: DAGO greater than morphine greater than DADLE greater than naloxone greater than etorphine much greater than U50488 much greater than DPDPE. In contrast, [3H]DPDPE binding to delta receptors was inhibited by compounds with the following rank order of potency: DPDPE greater than DADLE greater than etorphine greater than dynorphin(1-8) greater than naloxone much greater than U50488 much greater than DAGO. These profiles were consistent with specific labelling of the mu and delta opioid receptors, respectively. In vitro autoradiographic techniques coupled with computer-assisted image analyses revealed a discrete but differential anatomical localization of mu and delta receptors in the rat and guinea pig brain. In general, mu and delta receptor density in the rat exceeded that in the guinea pig brain and differed markedly from that of kappa receptors in these species. However, while mu receptors were distributed throughout the brain with "hotspots" in the fore-, mid- and hindbrain of the two rodents, the delta sites were relatively diffusely distributed, and were mainly concentrated in the forebrain with particularly high levels within the olfactory bulb (OB), n. accumbens and striatum. Notable regions of high density of mu receptors in the rat and guinea pig brain were the accessory olfactory bulb, striatal "patches" and "streaks," amygdaloid nuclei, ventral hippocampal subiculum and dentate gyrus, numerous thalamic nuclei, geniculate bodies, central grey, superior and inferior colliculi, solitary and pontine nuclei and s. nigra. Tissues of high delta receptor concentration included, OB (external plexiform layer), striatum, n. accumbens, amygdala and cortex (layers I-II and V-VI). Delta receptors in the guinea pig were, in general, similarly distributed to the rat, but in contrast to the latter, the hindbrain regions such as the thalamus, geniculate bodies, central grey and superior and inferior colliculi of the guinea pig were apparently more enriched than the rat. These patterns of mu and delta site distribution differed dramatically from that of the kappa opioid sites in these species studied with the peptide [125I]dynorphin(1-8).  相似文献   

14.
It has been previously reported that both the cysteinyl-endo-oligopeptidase A and the metalloendopeptidase EC 3.4.24.15 are able to generate enkephalin from a number of enkephalin-containing peptides, including dynorphin A1-8. The present study shows that only endo-oligopeptidase A is able to generate [Leu5]enkephalin and [Met5]enkephalin from dynorphin A1-8 and from metorphamide respectively. It is also shown that endo-oligopeptidase A neither hydrolyses the specific EC 3.4.24.15 substrate alpha-N-benzoyl-Gly-Ala-Ala-Phe p-aminobenzoate, nor is inhibited by the specific EC 3.4.24.15 inhibitor N-[1(RS)-carboxy-2-phenylethyl]-alpha-Ala-Ala-Phe p-aminobenzoate.  相似文献   

15.
A Dray  T P Davis 《Peptides》1985,6(2):217-221
Metorphamide (Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Met-Arg-Arg-Val-NH2) a novel amidated octapeptide fragment of proenkephalin A was synthesized, purified and subsequently shown to inhibit the reflex contractions of the rat urinary bladder following intracerebroventricular and spinal intrathecal microinjections. The effects of metorphamide were consistently antagonized by naloxone but not by the delta-opioid receptor antagonist ICI 174,864. Comparison of metorphamide with other proenkephalin A fragments suggested that the activity of this peptide was not due to in vivo processing to other active fragments. These data suggest that metorphamide has potent in vivo mu-opioid activity but little delta-opioid receptor activity.  相似文献   

16.
A ligand containing an SNpys group, i.e. 3-nitro-2-pyridinesulfenyl linked to a mercapto (or thiol) group, can bind covalently to a free mercapto group to form a disulfide bond via the thiol-disulfide exchange reaction. This SNpys chemistry has been successfully applied to the discriminative affinity labeling of mu and delta opioid receptors with SNpys-containing enkephalins [Yasunaga, T. et al. (1996) J. Biochem. 120, 459-465]. In order to explore the mercapto groups conserved at or near the ligand binding sites of three opioid receptor subtypes, we synthesized two Cys(Npys)-containing analogs of dynorphin A, namely, [D-Ala2, Cys(Npys)8]dynorphin A-(1-9) amide (1) and [D-Ala2, Cys(Npys)12]dynorphin A-(1-13) amide (2). When rat (mu and delta) or guinea pig (kappa) brain membranes were incubated with these Cys(Npys)-containing dynorphin A analogs and then assayed for inhibition of the binding of DAGO (mu), deltorphin II (delta), and U-69593 (kappa), the number of receptors decreased sharply, depending upon the concentrations of these Cys(Npys)-containing dynorphin A analogs. It was found that dynorphin A analogs 1 and 2 effectively label mu receptors (EC50 = 27-33 nM), but also label delta receptors fairly well (160-180 nM). However, for kappa receptors they showed drastically different potencies as to affinity labeling; i.e., EC50 = 210 nM for analog 1, but 10,000 nM for analog 2. Analog 2 labeled kappa receptors about 50 times more weakly than analog 1. These results suggested that dynorphin A analog 1 labels the Cys residues conserved in mu, delta, and kappa receptors, whereas analog 2 only labels the Cys residues conserved in mu and delta receptors.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Regulation of Proenkephalin Synthesis in Adrenal Medullary Chromaffin Cells   总被引:4,自引:4,他引:0  
The synthesis of proenkephalin was assessed in primary cultures of bovine adrenal medullary chromaffin cells by incubation of the cells with [35S]methionine, digestion of proenkephalin-derived peptides with trypsin and carboxy-peptidase B, and quantitation of radioactivity incorporated into Met-enkephalin following reversed-phase HPLC. Nicotine, histamine, and vasoactive intestinal peptide each enhanced the rate of proenkephalin synthesis approximately 10-fold when examined between 16 and 32 h after the drug or hormone addition. Inclusion of nifedipine (1 microM) partially blocked the stimulatory effect of nicotine, but not that of vasoactive intestinal peptide or histamine, or proenkephalin synthesis. Theophylline, tetrabenazine, and angiotensin II also increased the rate of proenkephalin synthesis (three- to eight-fold). These increases in the apparent rate of proenkephalin synthesis were not attributable to altered [35S]methionine specific radioactivity or rates of turnover and did not reflect similar increases in total protein synthesis. The half-life for turnover of Met-enkephalin sequences was 3-4 days in the cultured chromaffin cell. These studies directly show that proenkephalin synthesis is the primary regulatory step in control of chromaffin cell opioid peptide content.  相似文献   

19.
The distribution of the opioid peptide methionine-enkephalin-arginine6-phenylalanine7 (M-Enk-Arg6-Phe7) has been investigated in various structures of the rat brain by using a highly specific radioimmunoassay (RIA). Immunoreactive M-Enk-Arg6-Phe7 has been further characterized by high performance liquid chromatography. The levels of M-Enk-Arg6-Phe7 in various structures of the rat brain were compared with the levels of several other opioid peptides, including methionine-enkephalin (M-Enk), leucine-enkephalin (L-Enk), dynorphin 1-13, and alpha-neoendorphin, which were also measured by RIA. There was a close relationship between the distribution of M-Enk-Arg6-Phe7 immunoreactive material (ir), M-Enk ir, and L-Enk ir. The distribution of dynorphin 1-13 ir and alpha-neoendorphin ir appeared to be distinct from that of the enkephalin group. These results are in agreement with recent reports on the cloning and sequencing of the c-DNA coding for the prohormones, in which it has been hypothesized that M-Enk-Arg6-Phe7 and M-Enk are synthesized by the same precursor, called proenkephalin, and that dynorphin-related peptides and alpha-neoendorphin arise from a separate precursor, prodynorphin.  相似文献   

20.
Recent investigations have shown that the neuroendocrine and immune systems profoundly affect each other. In part, these interactions occur via common chemical messengers and receptors. One possible shared chemical messenger is the opioid precursor preproenkephalin, for which high concentrations of messenger RNA are present in brain, adrenal, and activated T helper cells. Because the biologic action of most peptide messengers depends on the posttranslational processing of the precursor, we have examined T helper cell lines for the production of proenkephalin-derived peptides. These peptides were characterized by multiple radioimmunoassays, gel filtration chromatography, and opiate radioreceptor assays. We found that activated T helper cells secrete significant concentrations of high-molecular-weight, opiate-inactive peptides, which are distinct from the proenkephalin-derived peptides of the neuroendocrine system. These studies clearly indicate cell-specific processing of proenkephalin, and suggest that the T helper cell-secreted products may have nonopiate receptor-mediated actions.  相似文献   

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