In Vivo Visualization of Delta Opioid Receptors upon Physiological Activation Uncovers a Distinct Internalization Profile

Archive ouverte

Faget, Lauren | Erbs, Eric | Le Merrer, Julie | Scherrer, Gregory | Matifas, Audrey | Benturquia, Nadia | Noble, Florence | Decossas, Marion | Koch, Marc | Kessler, Pascal | Vonesch, Jean‐luc | Schwab, Yannick | Kieffer, Brigitte, L. | Massotte, Dominique

Edité par CCSD ; Society for Neuroscience -

International audience. G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) mediate numerous physiological functions and represent prime therapeutic targets. Receptor trafficking upon agonist stimulation is critical for GPCR function, but examining this process in vivo remains a true challenge. Using knock-in mice expressing functional fluorescent delta opioid receptors under the control of the endogenous promoter, we visualized in vivo internalization of this native GPCR upon physiological stimulation. We developed a paradigm in which animals were made dependent on morphine in a drug-paired context. When re-exposed to this context in a drug-free state, mice showed context-dependent withdrawal signs and activation of the hippocampus. Receptor internalization was transiently detected in a subset of CA1 neurons, uncovering regionally restricted opioid peptide release. Importantly, a pool of surface receptors always remained, which contrasts with the in vivo profile previously established for exogenous drug-induced internalization. Therefore, a distinct response is observed at the receptor level upon a physiological or pharmacological stimulation. Altogether, direct in vivo GPCR visualization enables mapping receptor stimulation promoted by a behavioral challenge and represents a powerful approach to study endogenous GPCR physiology.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Distribution of delta opioid receptor-expressing neurons in the mouse hippocampus

Archive ouverte | Erbs, Eric | CCSD

International audience

Cues predicting drug or food reward restore morphine-induced place conditioning in mice lacking delta opioid receptors

Archive ouverte | Le Merrer, Julie | CCSD

International audience. The exact role of delta opioid receptors in drug-induced conditioned place preference (CPP) remains debated. Under classical experimental conditions, morphine-induced CPP is decreased in mice...

In vivo neuronal co-expression of mu and delta opioid receptors uncovers new therapeutic perspectives.

Archive ouverte | Erbs, Eric | CCSD

Opioid receptors belong to the G protein coupled receptor family. They modulate brain function at all levels of neural integration and therefore impact on autonomous, sensory, emotional and cognitive processing. In vivo functional...

Chargement des enrichissements...