Ethanol treatment alters beta-endorphin metabolism by purified synaptosomal plasma membranes |
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Authors: | T P Davis A J Culling-Berglund T J Gillespie T L Smith |
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Institution: | University of Arizona, College of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology, Tucson 85724. |
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Abstract: | Ethanol administration has been shown to affect beta-endorphin (beta-E) levels in most brain areas. Chronic ethanol treatment has also lead to changes in the levels of Met- and Leu-enkephalin which may be due to recent finding that enkephalin A activity is significantly altered. To determine if proteolytic enzymes responsible for beta-E metabolism at the pSPM are also altered, we studied the effect of chronic ethanol (7% v/v; 8 days) administration on in vitro central beta-E metabolism in male C57/BL mice. Purified SPM was time-course incubated with beta-E (20 microM) for 30-120 min and subjected to HPLC analyses for determination of beta-endorphin and related fragments. Chronic ethanol significantly reduced the half-life for beta-E at the pSPM (T1/2 = 50/min) versus controls (T1/2 = 100.4 min). Chronic ethanol also caused significant accumulation of the behaviorally active alpha- and gamma-type endorphins formed at the pSPM. These results suggest that chronic ethanol treatment leads to an increase in the activity of peptidases responsible for beta-E metabolism at pSPM leading to an increased formation of both alpha- and gamma-type endorphins which may affect alcohol related behaviors. |
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