2013
DOI: 10.1124/mol.113.089003
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Endocytic Profiles ofδ-Opioid Receptor Ligands Determine the Duration of Rapid but Not Sustained cAMP Responses

Abstract: Traditional assays that monitor cAMP inhibition by opioid receptor ligands require second-messenger accumulation over periods of 10-20 minutes. Since receptor regulation occurs within a similar time frame, such assays do not discriminate the actual signal from its modulation. Here we used bioluminescence resonance energy transfer to monitor inhibition of cAMP production by d-opioid receptor (DOR) agonists in real time. cAMP inhibition elicited by different agonists over a period of 15 minutes was biphasic, wit… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
(70 reference statements)
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“…These quantitative differences do not allow us to unequivocally conclude whether they are attributable to ligand-specific conformations or are simply determined by ligand efficacy. Indeed, since TIPP, morphine, and TAN-67 behave as partial agonists in G protein activation (Quock et al, 1997;Tudashki et al, 2014), their reduced capacity to phosphorylate the receptor is most likely due to the fact that as partial agonists, these drugs induce a marginal increase in Ser363 phosphorylation. Unlike these quantitative differences, mutagenesis studies have clearly established that different agonists may phosphorylate DOPrs at different intracellular domains, implying that receptors occupied by different ligands expose different phosphorylation sites to regulatory kinases Liggett, 2011;Just et al, 2013).…”
Section: Distinguishing Ligand Bias From Biased Responses Of D-opimentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These quantitative differences do not allow us to unequivocally conclude whether they are attributable to ligand-specific conformations or are simply determined by ligand efficacy. Indeed, since TIPP, morphine, and TAN-67 behave as partial agonists in G protein activation (Quock et al, 1997;Tudashki et al, 2014), their reduced capacity to phosphorylate the receptor is most likely due to the fact that as partial agonists, these drugs induce a marginal increase in Ser363 phosphorylation. Unlike these quantitative differences, mutagenesis studies have clearly established that different agonists may phosphorylate DOPrs at different intracellular domains, implying that receptors occupied by different ligands expose different phosphorylation sites to regulatory kinases Liggett, 2011;Just et al, 2013).…”
Section: Distinguishing Ligand Bias From Biased Responses Of D-opimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The idea that some receptors may continue to signal after internalization must also be considered in the context of desensitization (Mullershausen et al, 2009;Irannejad and von Zastrow, 2014;Tudashki et al, 2014). According to the traditional view, GPCRs effectively signal to G proteins only when they are at the plasma membrane and, aside from noncanonical barrmediated signaling (Shukla et al, 2011), internalized receptors have been classically considered inactive, 670 simply trafficking toward degradation or recycling (Hanyaloglu and von Zastrow, 2008).…”
Section: D-opioidmentioning
confidence: 99%
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