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Mu Opioids and Their Receptors: Evolution of a Concept

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TLDR
Understanding of these morphine-like agents and their receptors has undergone an evolution in thinking over the past 35 years, which now reveals a complexity of the morphine- like agents andtheir receptors that had not been previously appreciated.
Abstract
Opiates are among the oldest medications available to manage a number of medical problems. Although pain is the current focus, early use initially focused upon the treatment of dysentery. Opium contains high concentrations of both morphine and codeine, along with thebaine, which is used in the synthesis of a number of semisynthetic opioid analgesics. Thus, it is not surprising that new agents were initially based upon the morphine scaffold. The concept of multiple opioid receptors was first suggested almost 50 years ago (Martin, 1967), opening the possibility of new classes of drugs, but the morphine-like agents have remained the mainstay in the medical management of pain. Termed mu, our understanding of these morphine-like agents and their receptors has undergone an evolution in thinking over the past 35 years. Early pharmacological studies identified three major classes of receptors, helped by the discovery of endogenous opioid peptides and receptor subtypes—primarily through the synthesis of novel agents. These chemical biologic approaches were then eclipsed by the molecular biology revolution, which now reveals a complexity of the morphine-like agents and their receptors that had not been previously appreciated.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Structural insights into µ-opioid receptor activation

TL;DR: A 2.1 Å X-ray crystal structure of the murine μOR bound to the morphinan agonist BU72 and a G protein mimetic camelid antibody fragment is reported, revealing an extensive polar network between the ligand-binding pocket and the cytoplasmic domains appears to play a similar role in signal propagation for all three G-protein-coupled receptors.
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Opioid-induced hyperalgesia: Cellular and molecular mechanisms.

TL;DR: The molecular actors identified include the Toll-like receptor 4 and the anti-opioid systems as well as some other excitatory molecules, receptors, channels, chemokines, pro-inflammatory cytokines or lipids, which contribute to OIH.
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Breaking barriers to novel analgesic drug development

TL;DR: Recent advances in the understanding of the neurobiology of pain are beginning to offer opportunities for developing novel therapeutic strategies and revisiting existing targets, including modulating ion channels, enzymes and G-protein-coupled receptors.
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Transition-Metal-Catalyzed Selective Functionalization of C(sp3 )-H Bonds in Natural Products.

TL;DR: Advances in the transition-metal-catalyzed functionalization of C(sp3 )-H bonds have allowed natural product derivatives to be created selectively and strategies to achieve such transformation are reviewed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stereospecific interaction of opiate narcotics in binding of 3H-dihydromorphine to membranes of rat brain

TL;DR: It is concluded that the described technique can successfully detect the opiate narcotic receptors in the central nervous system without the usual method of displacement.
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Genetic differences in morphine sensitivity, tolerance and withdrawal in rats

TL;DR: There are significant genetic differences in a variety of effect of opiates in spontaneously hypertensive, Wistar-Kyoto (WK) and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats.
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The history of opium and some of its preparations and alkaloids

David I. Macht
- 06 Feb 1915 - 
TL;DR: If the entire materia medica at their disposal were limited to the choice and use of only one drug, I am sure that a great many, if not the majority, of us would choose opium; and I am convinced that if the authors were to select half a dozen of the most important drugs in the Pharmacopeia, they should all place opium in the first rank.
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Cyclazocine revisited

TL;DR: Cyclazocine, a compound synthesized in 1962 and studied in animals and man in the 1960's and in the early 1970's is a mu antagonist in rats and man and is a potent kappa agonist in both species.
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