Endogenous formation of morphine in human cells
- 21 September 2004
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 101 (39) , 14091-14096
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0405430101
Abstract
Morphine is a plant (opium poppy)-derived alkaloid and one of the strongest known analgesic compounds. Studies from several laboratories have suggested that animal and human tissue or fluids contain trace amounts of morphine. Its origin in mammals has been believed to be of dietary origin. Here, we address the question of whether morphine is of endogenous origin or derived from exogenous sources. Benzylisoquinoline alkaloids present in human neuroblastoma cells (SH-SY5Y) and human pancreas carcinoma cells (DAN-G) were identified by GC/tandem MS (MS/MS) as norlaudanosoline (DAN-G), reticuline (DAN-G and SH-SY5Y), and morphine (10 nM, SH-SY5Y). The stereochemistry of reticuline was determined to be 1-(S). Growth of the SH-SY5Y cell line in the presence of (18)O(2) led to the [(18)O]-labeled morphine that had the molecular weight 4 mass units higher than if grown in (16)O(2), indicating the presence of two atoms of (18)O per molecule of morphine. Growth of DAN-G cells in an (18)O(2) atmosphere yielded norlaudanosoline and (S)-reticuline, both labeled at only two of the four oxygen atoms. This result clearly demonstrates that all three alkaloids are of biosynthetic origin and suggests that norlaudanosoline and (S)-reticuline are endogenous precursors of morphine. Feeding of [ring-(13)C(6)]-tyramine, [1-(13)C, N-(13)CH(3)]-(S)-reticuline and [N-CD(3)]-thebaine to the neuroblastoma cells led each to the position-specific labeling of morphine, as established by GC/MS/MS. Without doubt, human cells can produce the alkaloid morphine. The studies presented here serve as a platform for the exploration of the function of "endogenous morphine" in the neurosciences and immunosciences.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- 1,2-Dehydroreticuline synthase, the branch point enzyme opening the morphinan biosynthetic pathwayPhytochemistry, 2004
- Presence of morphine and morphine-6-glucuronide in the marine mollusk Mytilus edulis ganglia determined by GC/MS and Q–TOF–MSMolecular Brain Research, 2001
- p-Hydroxyphenylacetaldehyde Is the Major Product of L-Tyrosine Oxidation by Activated Human PhagocytesJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Purification and properties of 1,2-dehydroreticuline reductase from Papaver somniferum seedlingsPhytochemistry, 1992
- Molecular cloning, expression, and induction of berberine bridge enzyme, an enzyme essential to the formation of benzophenanthridine alkaloids in the response of plants to pathogenic attack.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1991
- Fate of C-1 hydrogen during the incorporation of (S)- and (R)-reticuline into the opium alkaloid thebaineTetrahedron Letters, 1990
- Implication of tyramine in the biosynthesis of morphinan alkaloids in PapaverPlanta, 1987
- Purification and characterization of the berberine bridge enzyme from berberis beaniana cell culturesPhytochemistry, 1985
- Role of 1,2-dehydroreticulinium ion in the biosynthetic conversion of reticuline to thebaineJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1978
- 444. Investigations on the biosynthesis of morphine alkaloidsJournal of the Chemical Society, 1965