Opioid receptors in GtoPdb v.2021.3

  • Nurulain T. Zaveri
  • MacDonald J. Christie
  • Mark Connor
  • Hiroshi Ueda
  • Dominique Massot
  • Eric J. Simon
  • Anna Borsodi
  • Girolamo Calò
  • Volker Höllt
  • Yung Hou Wong
  • Stephen M. Husbands
  • Lee-Yuan Liu-Chen
  • Andreas Zimmer
  • Lawrence Toll
  • Christopher J. Evans
  • Michael R. Bruchas
  • Olivier Civelli
  • Ian Kitchen
  • Eamonn Kelly
  • Brigitte L. Kieffer
  • Lakshmi A. Devi
  • John R. Traynor
  • Mary Jeanne Kreek
  • Philip S. Portoghese
  • Charles Chavkin
  • Brian M. Cox
  • Jean-Claude Meunier
  • Graeme Henderson
  • Toni S. Shippenberg
  • Stefan Schulz
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Publication date
September 2021
Language
Unknown

Abstract

Opioid and opioid-like receptors are activated by a variety of endogenous peptides including [Met]enkephalin (met), [Leu]enkephalin (leu), β-endorphin (β-end), α-neodynorphin, dynorphin A (dynA), dynorphin B (dynB), big dynorphin (Big dyn), nociceptin/orphanin FQ (N/OFQ); endomorphin-1 and endomorphin-2 are also potential endogenous peptides. The Greek letter nomenclature for the opioid receptors, μ, δ and κ, is well established, and NC-IUPHAR considers this nomenclature appropriate, along with the symbols spelled out (mu, delta, and kappa), and the acronyms, MOP, DOP, and KOP. [121, 100, 91]. The human N/OFQ receptor, NOP, is considered 'opioid-related' rather than opioid because, while it exhibits a high degree of structural homology wit...

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