Agonists and antagonists bind to different domains of the cloned kappa opioid receptor.
- 16 August 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 91 (17) , 8042-8046
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.91.17.8042
Abstract
Opium and its derivatives are potent analgesics that can also induce severe side effects, including respiratory depression and addiction. Opioids exert their diverse physiological effects through specific membrane-bound receptors. Three major types of opioid receptors have been described, termed delta, kappa, and mu. The recent molecular cloning of these receptor types opens up the possibility to identify the ligand-binding domains of these receptors. To identify the ligand-binding domains of the kappa and delta receptors, we have expressed in COS-7 cells the cloned mouse delta and kappa receptors and chimeric delta/kappa and kappa/delta receptors in which the NH2 termini have been exchanged. The opioid antagonist naloxone binds potently to wild-type kappa receptor but not to wild-type delta receptor. The kappa/delta chimera bound [3H]naloxone with high affinity. In contrast, the kappa-specific agonist [3H]U-69,593 did not bind to the kappa/delta chimera. These findings indicate that selective agonists and antagonists interact with different recognition sites in the kappa receptor and localize the antagonist-binding domain to the NH2 terminus. Consistent with the results of radioligand-binding studies, the kappa/delta chimera did not mediate kappa-agonist inhibition of cAMP formation. In contrast, the delta/kappa chimera did mediate kappa-agonist inhibition of cAMP formation, but this effect was not blocked by naloxone. Furthermore, a truncated kappa receptor lacking its NH2 terminus was able to mediate agonist inhibition of cAMP accumulation in a naloxone-insensitive manner. This result further indicates that the NH2 terminus of the kappa receptor contains the selective antagonist-binding domain. The ability to dissociate agonist- and antagonist-binding sites will facilitate the development of more specific kappa agonists, which could have analgesic properties devoid of side effects.Keywords
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