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Vol. 30, Issue 3, 231-234, March 2002
Veterans Affairs Medical Center and The P-glycoprotein (P-gp) transport system, responsible
for the efflux of many therapeutic drugs out of the brain, recently has
been shown to transport the endogenous brain opiate endorphin. We used
P-gp knockout mice (Mdr1a) and their controls to determine where P-gp
is involved in the saturable efflux systems of four other endogenous
opiate-modulating peptides across the blood-brain barrier (BBB).
After injection of endomorphin-1 (Tyr-Pro-Trp-Phe-NH2), endomorphin-2 (Tyr-Pro-Phe-Phe-NH2), Met-enkephalin
(Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Met-OH), and Tyr-MIF-1
(Tyr-Pro-Leu-Gly-NH2) into the lateral ventricle of the
mouse brain, residual radioactivity was measured at 0, 2, 5, 10, and 20 min later. The results showed no difference in the disappearance of any
of these peptides from the brains of knockout mice compared with their
controls. This demonstrates that unlike endorphin and morphine, P-gp
does not seem to be required for the brain-to-blood transport of the
endomorphins, Met-enkephalin, or Tyr-MIF-1 across the BBB.
Tulane University School of
Medicine,
New Orleans, Louisiana