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      Endorphins: profound behavioral effects in rats suggest new etiological factors in mental illness.

      Science (New York, N.Y.)
      Animals, Behavior, Animal, drug effects, Body Temperature, Catatonia, chemically induced, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Humans, Naloxone, pharmacology, Nerve Tissue Proteins, Oligopeptides, Peptides, antagonists & inhibitors, Receptors, Opioid, Reflex, Structure-Activity Relationship

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          Abstract

          The endogenous morphinomimetic brain peptides Met5-enkephalin and alpha-, beta-, and gamma-endorphins have been evaluated in rats after intracerebrospinal fluid injection. beta-Endorphin produces marked, prolonged muscular rigidity and immobility similar to a catatonic state, counteracted by the opiate antagonist naloxone; this effect occurs at molar doses 1/100 to 1/400 that at which the other peptides or morphine block the response to painful stimuli. All peptides evoked dose-related, naloxone-reversible, wet-dog shakes in rats that had not been exposed to drugs. beta-Endorphin produced hypothermia, whereas gamma-endorphin produced hyperthermia. Such potent and divergent responses to naturally occurring subtances suggest that alterations in their homeostatic regulation could have etiological significance in mental illness.

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