Publication | Open Access
Absence of opioid stress-induced analgesia in mice lacking beta-endorphin by site-directed mutagenesis.
332
Citations
29
References
1996
Year
Pain MedicineTyrosine CodonOpioid Stress-induced AnalgesiaWater Swim StressMolecular PainMolecular PharmacologySite-directed MutagenesisHealth SciencesNeuropharmacologyEndocrinologyPharmacologyPain ResearchDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyNeuropeptide ReceptorPain MechanismMild Swim StressMedicineOpioid Use DisorderNeuropeptides
A physiological role for beta-endorphin in endogenous pain inhibition was investigated by targeted mutagenesis of the proopiomelanocortin gene in mouse embryonic stem cells. The tyrosine codon at position 179 of the proopiomelanocortin gene was converted to a premature translational stop codon. The resulting transgenic mice display no overt developmental or behavioral alterations and have a normally functioning hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Homozygous transgenic mice with a selective deficiency of beta-endorphin exhibit normal analgesia in response to morphine, indicating the presence of functional mu-opiate receptors. However, these mice lack the opioid (naloxone reversible) analgesia induced by mild swim stress. Mutant mice also display significantly greater nonopioid analgesia in response to cold water swim stress compared with controls and display paradoxical naloxone-induced analgesia. These changes may reflect compensatory upregulation of alternative pain inhibitory mechanisms.
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