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Science 13 March 1981:
Vol. 211. no. 4487, pp. 1166 - 1169
DOI: 10.1126/science.6258227

Articles

Science, Vol 211, Issue 4487, 1166-1169
Copyright © 1981 by American Association for the Advancement of Science


articles

Opiate receptor gradients in monkey cerebral cortex: correspondence with sensory processing hierarchies

ME Lewis, M Mishkin, E Bragin, RM Brown, CB Pert, and A Pert

In order to obtain information on the possible functions of endogenous opiates in the primate cerebral cortex, we assessed the distribution of mu-like opiate receptors (which selectively bind 3H-labeled naloxone) and delta-like opiate receptors (which selectively bind 3H-labeled D-Ala2, D-Leu5-enkephalin) throughout the cerebral cortex of the rhesus monkey. Stereospecific [3H]naloxone binding sites increased in a gradient along hierarchically organized cortical systems that sequentially process modality-specific sensory information of a progressively more complex nature. Specific [3H]enkephalin binding sites, in contrast, were relatively evenly distributed throughout the cerebral cortex. These results, in combination with electrophysiological studies of monkeys and humans, suggest that mu-like opiate receptors may play a role in the affective filtering of sensory stimuli at the cortical level, that is, in emotion-induced selective attention.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Neuromodulatory Basis of Emotion.
J.-M. Fellous (1999)
Neuroscientist 5, 283-294
   Abstract »    PDF »
Opiate receptor distribution in the cerebral cortex of the Rhesus monkey.
S. Wise and M Herkenham (1982)
Science 218, 387-389
   Abstract »    PDF »



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