“…Since these early observations the repertoire of opioidmediated signals has continuously grown, first with the discovery that bg dimers derived from Gai/o proteins could modulate membrane-delimited enzymes (e.g., ACs, PLCb, and channels such as Cav2 and Kir3) and, more recently, with the finding that DOPrs also engage kinase signaling cascades. Concomitant with such multiplication of effectors, the availability of novel cell-based assays (Audet et al, 2008;Tudashki et al, 2014), Ga-specific antibodies (Garzón et al, 1997;Law and Reisine, 1997), antisense oligonucleotides (Standifer et al, 1996), and gene silencing/editing technologies enabled researchers to confirm that DOPrs pleiotropically couple to a multiplicity of G proteins beyond the classic Gai 1,2,3/o subtypes (reviewed in Piñeyro and Archer-Lahlou, 2007). This coupling diversity allows opioid receptors to trigger a great variety of signals (summarized in Table 4), whose contribution to the in vivo actions of DOPr ligands is the subject of active investigation.…”