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  • Title: The molecular mechanisms of cellular tolerance to delta-opioid agonists. A minireview.
    Author: Varga EV.
    Journal: Acta Biol Hung; 2003; 54(2):203-18. PubMed ID: 14535626.
    Abstract:
    Chronic treatment with deltaopioid agonists, similar to other agonist drugs, causes tolerance. Tolerance is a complex adaptation process that consists of multiple, cellular and neural-system adaptations. Cellular tolerance to delta-opioid agonists involves feedback-regulation of the function, concentration, and localization of the delta-opioid receptors (receptor desensitization) as well as of intracellular effectors (functional desensitization). We are using a recombinant Chinese hamster ovary cell line expressing the human delta-opioid receptors (hDOR/CHO) to investigate the molecular mechanisms of cellular tolerance. We found that the structurally distinct delta-opioid agonists mediate receptor down-regulation by different mechanisms. Thus, truncation of the last 35 C-terminal amino acids of the hDOR completely abolished DPDPE, but not SNC 80-mediated receptor down-regulation. In addition, down-regulation of the wild type-, and the truncated hDORs exhibited different inhibitor sensitivity-profile. Chronic delta-opioid agonist treatment also causes functional desensitization of forskolin-stimulated cAMP formation and cAMP overshoot in the hDOR/CHO cells. We have demonstrated that chronic SNC 80 treatment also causes concurrent phosphorylation of the adenylyl cyclase (AC) VI isoenzyme hDOR/CHO cells. Both AC superactivation and AC VI phosphorylation were SNC 80 dose-dependent, naltrindole-sensitive, and exhibited similar time course-, and protein kinase inhibitor-sensitivity profile. We hypothesize that phosphorylation of AC VI plays an important role in delta-opioid agonist-mediated AC superactivation in hDOR/CHO cells.
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