Although the postnatal development of opioid systems of mammalian brain has been well studied, little is known about the ontogeny of and relationship between embryonic (E) opioid peptides and their receptors. Moreover, a simultaneous assessment of levels of the 3 classes of opioid peptides and their putative receptors during embryonal development has not been made. To this end, the ontogeny of opioid peptides and receptors in mouse brain were examined during the period E11.5 to postnatal day 1 (P1). Met-enkephalin, dynorphin and beta-endorphin immunoreactivity were detected before their putative opioid receptors. beta-Endorphin can be discerned as early as E11.5, whereas mu binding was first observed at E12.5. Although dynorphin and Met-enkephalin were measurable at the same time as beta-endorphin, kappa-receptors were not detected until E14.5 and delta sites were not found at all prenatally. Differences in immunoreactivity levels of the 3 peptides occur with dynorphin being lower than Met-enkephalin and beta-endorphin, consistent with a low Bmax for kappa binding. Expression of the 3 opioid peptides as well as mu and kappa opioid receptors rapidly increase in parallel from E14.5 to E18.5. Interestingly, levels of beta-endorphin diminish by P1, the stage at which a sharp rise of mu receptors occurs. In a comparative study of the binding of beta-endorphin 1-31, its truncated form (1-27) and their N-acetyl derivatives to E14.5 brain membranes, beta-endorphin 1-31 exhibited the highest affinity.
The relative subcellular distributions of mu-opioid receptors and guanine nucleotide binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) in 1-day-old (P1) and adult rat forebrain were compared. Light membranes (LMs) were resolved from heavy membranes (HM) by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Marker enzyme analyses indicated that LMs contained most of the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi complexes, whereas HMs were enriched in plasma membranes. Binding distribution and properties of mu-opioid sites were assessed using [3H] [D-Ala2,Me-Phe4,Gly-ol5]enkephalin. P1 LMs possessed 43% of the total mu-opioid binding detected compared to 16% in the adult. Although NaCl inhibited mu binding in LMs to a greater extent than in HMs, age-dependent differences were not observed. P1 LM mu binding possessed greater sensitivity to 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate than their adult counterpart. Moreover, P1 LMs contained more Go alpha protein than P1 HMs or adult LMs, as demonstrated by immunoblotting with antisera against Go alpha after one- or two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. These results suggest that P1 LMs contain a greater proportion of newly synthesized intracellular mu sites than adult LMs.
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