Escriba P V, Sastre M, Garcia-Sevilla J A
Department of Fundamental Biology and Health Sciences, University of the Balearic Islands, Palma de Mallorca, Spain.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1994 Jun;51(6):494-501. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.1994.03950060058006.
To directly evaluate the guanine nucleotide-binding (G) protein subunits alpha, beta, and gamma, which are involved in the signal transduction of opioid receptors, in the postmortem brains of heroin addicts who had died of an opiate overdose.
Specimens of the frontal cortex (Brodmann's area 9) were collected from 11 heroin addicts and 10 control subjects without a history of drug abuse. The biochemical status of human brain G protein subunits during opiate dependence was studied by means of immunoblotting techniques. Solubilized G proteins were separated by gel electrophoresis, transferred to pyroxylin membranes (western blotting) labeled with specific antiserum samples, and quantitated by image analysis after enhanced chemoluminescence.
In the frontal cortex, relevant increases in the immunoreactivities of G alpha i 1/2 (19% +/- 4%, P < .005), G alpha o (29% +/- 7%, P < .005), and G alpha s (26% +/- 5%, P < .005) but not of G alpha i3 were found in heroin addicts compared with age- and sex-matched controls. Moreover, the amount of G protein beta-subunit immunoreactivity was also consistently increased (27% +/- 8%, P < .01) compared with controls in the same brain region. These G protein changes in the brains of human opiate addicts paralleled (with the exception of G alpha s) those obtained in the brains of morphine hydrochloride-dependent rats. The increase in G alpha s immunoreactivity that was observed in the rat brain only after the short-term morphine administration (24% +/- 3%, P < .005) suggests that the increase in G alpha s immunoreactivity in the brains of human addicts could be the cellular response to a deadly overdose of heroin.
Alterations in the density of specific Gi and Go protein subunits that are coupled to mu-opioid and other opioid receptors may be of clinical relevance in opiate tolerance, dependence, and abstinence syndrome.
直接评估参与阿片受体信号转导的鸟嘌呤核苷酸结合(G)蛋白亚基α、β和γ,这些亚基存在于死于阿片类药物过量的海洛因成瘾者的尸检大脑中。
从11名海洛因成瘾者和10名无药物滥用史的对照受试者中采集额叶皮质(布罗德曼9区)样本。通过免疫印迹技术研究阿片类药物依赖期间人脑G蛋白亚基的生化状态。将溶解的G蛋白通过凝胶电泳分离,转移到用特异性抗血清样本标记的硝化纤维素膜上(蛋白质印迹法),并在增强化学发光后通过图像分析进行定量。
与年龄和性别匹配的对照相比,在海洛因成瘾者的额叶皮质中,发现Gαi 1/2(19%±4%,P<.005)、Gαo(29%±7%,P<.005)和Gαs(26%±5%,P<.005)的免疫反应性有相应增加,但Gαi3没有增加。此外,与同一脑区的对照相比,G蛋白β亚基的免疫反应性也持续增加(27%±8%,P<.01)。人类阿片类成瘾者大脑中的这些G蛋白变化(Gαs除外)与盐酸吗啡依赖大鼠大脑中的变化相似。仅在短期给予吗啡后在大鼠大脑中观察到的Gαs免疫反应性增加(24%±3%,P<.005)表明,人类成瘾者大脑中Gαs免疫反应性的增加可能是对致命海洛因过量的细胞反应。
与μ-阿片受体和其他阿片受体偶联的特定Gi和Go蛋白亚基密度的改变可能在阿片类药物耐受性、依赖性和戒断综合征中具有临床意义。