| Literature DB >> 23960211 |
Hiroyuki Watanabe1, Sylvia Fitting2, Muhammad Z Hussain1, Olga Kononenko3, Anna Iatsyshyna4, Takashi Yoshitake5, Jan Kehr5, Kanar Alkass6, Henrik Druid6, Henrik Wadensten7, Per E Andren7, Ingrid Nylander1, Douglas H Wedell8, Oleg Krishtal9, Kurt F Hauser10, Fred Nyberg1, Victor M Karpyak11, Tatjana Yakovleva1, Georgy Bakalkin1.
Abstract
Lateralization of the processing of positive and negative emotions and pain suggests an asymmetric distribution of the neurotransmitter systems regulating these functions between the left and right brain hemispheres. By virtue of their ability to selectively mediate euphoria, dysphoria, and pain, the μ-, δ-, and κ-opioid receptors and their endogenous ligands may subserve these lateralized functions. We addressed this hypothesis by comparing the levels of the opioid receptors and peptides in the left and right anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), a key area for emotion and pain processing. Opioid mRNAs and peptides and 5 "classical" neurotransmitters were analyzed in postmortem tissues from 20 human subjects. Leu-enkephalin-Arg (LER) and Met-enkephalin-Arg-Phe, preferential δ-/μ- and κ-/μ-opioid agonists, demonstrated marked lateralization to the left and right ACC, respectively. Dynorphin B (Dyn B) strongly correlated with LER in the left, but not in the right ACC suggesting different mechanisms of the conversion of this κ-opioid agonist to δ-/μ-opioid ligand in the 2 hemispheres; in the right ACC, Dyn B may be cleaved by PACE4, a proprotein convertase regulating left-right asymmetry formation. These findings suggest that region-specific lateralization of neuronal networks expressing opioid peptides underlies in part lateralization of higher functions, including positive and negative emotions and pain in the human brain.Entities:
Keywords: anterior cingulate cortex; emotions; endogenous opioid system; lateralization; pain
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23960211 PMCID: PMC4259275 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bht204
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357