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  • Title: Mu-opioid receptor is located on the plasma membrane of dendrites that receive asymmetric synapses from axon terminals containing leucine-enkephalin in the rat nucleus locus coeruleus.
    Author: Van Bockstaele EJ, Colago EE, Moriwaki A, Uhl GR.
    Journal: J Comp Neurol; 1996 Dec 02; 376(1):65-74. PubMed ID: 8946284.
    Abstract:
    We have recently shown, by using immunoelectron microscopy, that the mu-opioid receptor (mu OR) is prominently distributed within noradrenergic perikarya and dendrites of the nucleus locus coeruleus (LC), many of which receive excitatory-type (i.e., asymmetric) synaptic contacts from unlabeled axon terminals. To characterize further the neurotransmitter present in these afferent terminals, we examined in the present study the ultrastructural localization of an antipeptide sequence unique to the mu OR in sections that were also dually labeled for the opioid peptide leucine-enkephalin (L-ENK). Immunogold-silver labeling for mu OR was localized to extrasynaptic portions of the plasma membranes of perikarya and dendrites. The mu OR-labeled dendrites were usually postsynaptic to axon terminals containing heterogeneous types of synaptic vesicles and forming asymmetric synaptic specializations characteristic of excitatory-type synapses. The majority of these were immunolabeled for the endogenous opioid peptide L-ENK. Some mu OR-labeled dendrites received synaptic contacts from unlabeled axon terminals in fields containing L-ENK immunoreactivity. In such cases, the mu OR-labeled dendrites were in proximity to L-ENK axon terminals that contained intense peroxidase labeling within large dense core vesicles along the perimeter of the axoplasm. These results indicate that L-ENK may be released by exocytosis from the dense core vesicles and diffuse within the extracellular space to reach mu OR sites on the postsynaptic dendrite or dendrites of other neighboring neurons. The present study also reveals that unlabeled terminals apposed to mu OR-labeled dendrites may contain other opioid peptides, such as methionine-enkephalin. These data demonstrate several sites where endogenous opioid peptides may interact with mu OR receptive sites in the LC and may provide an anatomical substrate for the LC's involvement in mechanisms of opiate dependence and withdrawal.
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