Fol. Biol. 2012, 58, 49-56

https://doi.org/10.14712/fb2012058020049

Endogenous Morphine: Up-to-Date Review 2011

George B. Stefano1,2, R. Ptáček1, H. Kuželová1,3, R. M. Kream2

1Department of Psychiatry of the First Faculty of Medicine and General University Hospital, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic
2Neuroscience Research Institute, State University of New York – College at Old Westbury, Old Westbury, NY, USA
3Department of Biology and Medical Genetics, Second Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic

Received August 2011
Accepted August 2011

Positive evolutionary pressure has apparently preserved the ability to synthesize chemically authentic morphine, albeit in homeopathic concentrations, throughout animal phyla. Despite the establishment of a progressively rigorous and mechanistically focused historical literature extending from the mid 1970s to the mid 1980s that supported the expression of chemically authentic morphine by animal cellular and organ systems, prejudicial scepticism and early dismissal by scientists and clinicians most often obscured widespread acceptance of the biological importance and medical implications of endogenous morphine. The current critical paper presents and evaluates key recent coordinated studies in endogenous morphine research, highlighting those that have advanced our understanding of the functional roles of cognate alkaloid-selective μ3 and μ4 opiate receptors. We propose that the expression of endogenous morphine by animal and human cells is designed to mediate homeopathic regulation of metabolic activity via activation of cognate μ3 and μ4 receptors that serve as transductive conduits for shortcircuit Ca++ fluxes. The implications of endogenous morphine coupling to nitric oxide regulation of mitochondrial function, with special reference to the cardiovascular system, are now formulated after many years of neglect.

References

50 live references