Zadina J E, Kastin A J
Peptides. 1985 Sep-Oct;6(5):965-70. doi: 10.1016/0196-9781(85)90329-8.
The interactions between Tyr-MIF-1, a brain peptide with antiopiate activity, and the beta-casomorphins, a family of peptides derived from milk protein with opiate activity, were investigated by in vitro binding assays. Specific binding of 125I-Tyr-MIF-1 to rat brain membranes was displaced with high potency by beta-casomorphin, morphiceptin, and the morphiceptin analog PL017 but not by the analgesically inactive analog D-Pro2-morphiceptin or by several other ligands for classical delta, kappa, or sigma opiate receptors. In addition, Tyr-MIF-1 displaced 125I-morphiceptin from its binding sites in brain with affinities similar to those of unlabeled morphiceptin and PL017. These results, which include the first demonstration of a binding site in brain for labeled morphiceptin, indicate that brain antiopiate Tyr-MIF-1 and the beta-casomorphin derived peptides with opiate activity may share a common binding site or cross-react at each other's site. This suggests a possible mechanism of action for endogenous antiopiate-opiate interactions.