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

Authors

  • Eric Erbs, Lauren Faget, Pierre Veinante, Brigitte L Kieffer, Dominique Massotte

Abstract

Opioid receptors are G protein coupled receptors that modulate brain function at all levels of neural integration, including autonomous, sensory, emotional and cognitive processing. Mu and delta opioid receptors functionally interact in vivo, but whether interactions occur at circuitry, cellular or molecular level remains unsolved. Also, the notion of receptor crosstalk via mu-delta heteromers is well documented in vitro but in vivo evidence remains scarce. To identify neurons in which receptor interactions could take place, we designed a unique double mutant knock-in mouse line that expresses functional red-fluorescent mu receptors and green-fluorescent delta receptors. We mapped mu and delta receptor distribution and co-localization throughout the nervous system and created the first interactive brain atlas with concomitant mu-delta visualization at subcellular resolution (http://mordor.ics-mci.fr/). Mu and delta receptors co-localize in neurons from subcortical networks but are mainly detected in separate neurons in the forebrain. Also, co-immunoprecipitation experiments indicated physical proximity in the hippocampus, a prerequisite to mu-delta heteromerization. Altogether, data suggest that mu-delta functional interactions take place at systems level for high-order emotional and cognitive processing whereas mu-delta may interact at cellular level in brain networks essential for survival, which has potential implications for innovative drug design in pain control, drug addiction and eating disorders.

Published

2014-08-13

Issue

Section

Review