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Vol. 58, Issue 6, 1570-1580, December 2000
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology (S.A., D.K.G.) and Vollum
Institute for Advanced Biomedical Research, Oregon Health Sciences
University, Portland, Oregon (V.A.-M., J.T.W.); and Molecular Probes,
Inc., Eugene, Oregon (G.T.)
The dynamics of agonist-stimulated opioid receptor internalization and
trafficking have been difficult to study in living cells in part
because the available probes were inadequate. To overcome this
obstacle, six new fluorescent opioid peptides were developed.
Dermorphin (DERM), deltorphin (DELT), TIPP, and endomorphin were
conjugated to BODIPY TR or Alexa Fluor 488, two fluorescent dyes with
distinct hydrophobic properties. In membrane binding assays the
fluorescent conjugates DERM-A488 or -BTR, DELT-A488 or -BTR, and
TIPP-A488 displayed good binding affinity and selectivity for µ- and
-opioid receptor subtypes. Furthermore, the fluorescent conjugates
of dermorphin and deltorphin were biologically active as demonstrated
by their ability to hyperpolarize locus coeruleus neurons (DERM-A488 or
-BTR) and inhibit calcium currents in NG108-15 (DELT-A488). Both of
these responses were antagonized by naloxone. In conjunction with
confocal fluorescent microscopy the trafficking of these fluorescent
ligands was monitored in real-time. The internalization of these
ligands by µ- and
-opioid receptors was found to be naloxone-sensitive and temperature-dependent. Interestingly, once these
ligands were internalized the fluorescent puncta that formed became
distributed in one of two patterns. In Chinese hamster ovary cells
heterologously expressing either µ- or
-opioid receptors the intracellular puncta were concentrated in the perinuclear region of
the cell, whereas they were distributed throughout the cytoplasm in
cells derived from either NG108-15 or SH-SY5Y cells. In summary, we
have demonstrated that these novel, fluorescent opioid peptide
conjugates permit real-time visual tracking of receptor-ligand
complexes, including their internalization and trafficking, in living cells.
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V. A. Alvarez, S. Arttamangkul, V. Dang, A. Salem, J. L. Whistler, M. von Zastrow, D. K. Grandy, and J. T. Williams {micro}-Opioid Receptors: Ligand-Dependent Activation of Potassium Conductance, Desensitization, and Internalization J. Neurosci., July 1, 2002; 22(13): 5769 - 5776. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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