Opioids are widely prescribed pain relievers with multiple side effects and potential complications. They produce analgesia via G-protein-protein coupled receptors: μ-, δ-, κ-opioid and opioid receptor-like 1 receptors. Bivalent ligands targeted to the oligomerized opioid receptors might be the key to developing analgesics without undesired side effects and obtaining effective treatment for opioid addicts. In this review we will update the biological effects of μ-opioids on homo- or hetero-oligomerized μ-opioid receptor and discuss potential mechanisms through which bivalent ligands exert beneficial effects, including adenylate cyclase regulation and receptor-mediated signaling pathways
Opioid analgesics are a critical class of medications, with severe side effects such as lethal respi...
Opioids are the most widely used analgesics for the treatment of clinical pain. They produce their t...
The opioid receptors (OR) belong to the family of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). ORs mediate t...
[[abstract]]Opioids are widely prescribed pain relievers with multiple side effects and potential co...
Opioids are the oldest drugs know to humanity, which have been and continue to be used for the treat...
The observation in 1979 that opioid receptors interact, led to the design of bivalent ligands in an ...
Numerous G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) display ligand-free basal signaling with potential phys...
Background and Purpose: Targeting more than one opioid receptor type simultaneously may have analges...
International audienceMu opioid receptors modulate a large number of physiological functions. They a...
Opioids are among the most effective analgesics available and are the first choice in the treatment ...
Opioid drugs like morphine and fentanyl are the gold standard for treating moderate to severe acute ...
Most clinical opioids produce analgesia through the Mu Opioid Receptor (MOR) providing the only effe...
Most clinically used opioids are thought to induce analgesia through activation of the mu opioid rec...
Background: Central and peripheral analgesia without adverse effects relies on the identification of...
Pain is one of the most common medical ailments experienced worldwide, affecting roughly 20% of the ...
Opioid analgesics are a critical class of medications, with severe side effects such as lethal respi...
Opioids are the most widely used analgesics for the treatment of clinical pain. They produce their t...
The opioid receptors (OR) belong to the family of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). ORs mediate t...
[[abstract]]Opioids are widely prescribed pain relievers with multiple side effects and potential co...
Opioids are the oldest drugs know to humanity, which have been and continue to be used for the treat...
The observation in 1979 that opioid receptors interact, led to the design of bivalent ligands in an ...
Numerous G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) display ligand-free basal signaling with potential phys...
Background and Purpose: Targeting more than one opioid receptor type simultaneously may have analges...
International audienceMu opioid receptors modulate a large number of physiological functions. They a...
Opioids are among the most effective analgesics available and are the first choice in the treatment ...
Opioid drugs like morphine and fentanyl are the gold standard for treating moderate to severe acute ...
Most clinical opioids produce analgesia through the Mu Opioid Receptor (MOR) providing the only effe...
Most clinically used opioids are thought to induce analgesia through activation of the mu opioid rec...
Background: Central and peripheral analgesia without adverse effects relies on the identification of...
Pain is one of the most common medical ailments experienced worldwide, affecting roughly 20% of the ...
Opioid analgesics are a critical class of medications, with severe side effects such as lethal respi...
Opioids are the most widely used analgesics for the treatment of clinical pain. They produce their t...
The opioid receptors (OR) belong to the family of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). ORs mediate t...