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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 Chiou,  
 

[Phe1psi(CH2-NH)Gly2]nociceptin-(1 - 13)-NH2 activation of an inward rectifier as a partial agonist of ORL1 receptors in rat periaqueductal gray.

1. [Phe1psi(CH2-NH)Gly2]nociceptin-(1 - 13)-NH2 (Phepsi), a tridecapeptide analogue of orphanin FQ/nociceptin (OFQ/N), was introduced as a competitive antagonist of opioid receptor-like orphan receptor (ORL1) in guinea-pig ileum and mouse vas deferens preparations in vitro but was recently found to act as an agonist in vivo. 2. In the periaqueductal gray, a site enriched with both OFQ/N and ORL1 and involved in OFQ/N-induced hyperalgesia and anti-analgesia, the effects of Phepsi and OFQ/N on the membrane current were studied using whole cell patch clamp recording technique in rat brain slices. 3. OFQ/N (0.01 - 1 microM) activated an inwardly rectifying type of K+ channels in ventrolateral neurons of PAG. Phepsi (0.03 - 1 microM), like OFQ/N, also activated this inward rectifier but had only 30% efficacy of OFQ/N. 4 At maximal effective concentration (1 microM), Phepsi reversed the increment of K+ conductance induced by OFQ/N (300 nM) by 46%. On the other hand, Phepsi also prevented the effect of OFQ/N if pretreated before OFQ/N. 5 It is suggested that Phepsi acts as a partial agonist of ORL1 that mediates the activation of inwardly rectifying K+ channels in ventrolateral neurons of rat periaqueductal gray.[1]

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