Abstract

Chronic morphine treatment of rats decreased the level of phosphorylation of synaptic membrane proteins of the striatum assayed in vitro. Although the patterns of phosphorylated proteins separated on SDS-gel electrophoresis from morphine-tolerant rats resembled patterns produced by lowering Ca2+ levels in the assay, supplementation of the protein kinase assay with Ca2+ and its binding protein, calmodulin, did not restore full kinase activity. The addition of methadone or etorphine to the protein kinase in vitro however, was able to block the Ca2+-calmodulin stimulation of phosphorylation in both synaptic membranes and intact synaptosomes. These data suggest that opioids produce an irreversible (or slowly reversible) defect in the Ca2+-dependent protein kinase system of striatal membranes.

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