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Journal Article

Citation

Zalsman G, Molcho A, Huang Y, Dwork A, Li S, Mann JJ. J. Neural. Transm. 2005; 112(7): 949-954.

Affiliation

Division of Neuroscience, Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s00702-004-0239-3

PMID

15937639

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Endogenous opiates may reinforce self-injurious behavior in animal and human subjects. Higher postmortem mu-opioid receptor binding is reported in some brain regions in young compared with older suicide victims. The present study compared opioid receptor binding kinetics in postmortem brains of young suicide victims and matched controls in two brain areas. METHODS: The density (Bmax) and affinity (K(D)) of the mu-opioid receptors were assayed postmortem using [3H] DAGO in prefrontal cortex (PFC) and pre-post central gyri (PPCG) in 9 suicide victims and 10 controls, matched for age and gender ratio. RESULTS: Binding indices did not differ between suicide victims and controls in either brain area and did not correlate with age. PFC Bmax was higher than PPCG Bmax (F=8.030; df=1,16; p=.012) for the combined sample. There was no brain region difference in K(D) between PFC and PPCG, but the interaction between K(D) and group was significant (F = 5.890; df = 1,16; p = .027). The K(D) in the suicide victims was lower than controls in the PFC and higher than controls in the PPCG. CONCLUSION: Our study demonstrated more mu-opioid receptors in PFC compared with PPCG binding regardless of suicide status. The region-dependent differences in binding affinity in suicide victims may reflect regionally different opiate transmission.


Language: en

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