Protein Information

ID 382
Name enkephalin
Synonyms Met enkephalin; enkephalin; M enkephalin

Compound Information

ID 333
Name chloralose
CAS

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
1564731 Barron BA, Gu H, Gaugl JF, Caffrey JL: Screening for opioids in dog heart. . J Mol Cell Cardiol. 1992 Jan;24(1):67-77.
Dog hearts divided into right and left atria, right and left ventricles and intraventricular septum were homogenized in acid for extraction. Total opioids, and specific peptides (methionine-enkephalin, methionine-enkephalin-arg6-gly7-leu8) were determined by radioreceptor and radioimmunoassay, respectively. Catecholamines were quantitated amperometrically following HPLC. The effects of anesthetic agents (pentobarbital, alpha-chloralose), hemorrhage and ganglionic blockade (hexamethonium and atropine) were evaluated. Total opioids, enkephalins and epinephrine were distributed uniformly throughout the myocardium, while norepinephrine was preferentially concentrated in the atria. Immunoreactive methionine-enkephalin accounted for only 1 to 2% of the total cardiac opioids estimated by radioreceptor assay. Hemorrhage lowered methionine-enkephalin content throughout the myocardium with no significant effect on total opioids or catecholamines. Ganglionic blockade increased total opioid, methionine-enkephalin-arg6-gly7-leu8 and catecholamine content without altering methionine-enkephalin content. HPLC of left ventricular extracts demonstrated that 50% of met-enkephalin-immunoreactivity eluted at retention times equal to synthetic metenkephalin. In summary, there appears to be substantive opioid concentrations within canine myocardium which respond to physiological and pharmacological interventions. These cardiac opioid responses do not parallel changes observed for catecholamines under the same conditions.
4(0,0,0,4)