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AB217766

Anti-Mu Opioid Receptor antibody

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(2 Publications)

Rabbit Polyclonal Mu Opioid Receptor antibody. Suitable for IHC-P and reacts with Mouse samples. Cited in 2 publications. Immunogen corresponding to Synthetic Peptide within Human OPRM1 aa 150-250 conjugated to Keyhole Limpet Haemocyanin.

View Alternative Names

MOR1, OPRM1, Mu-type opioid receptor, M-OR-1, MOR-1, Mu opiate receptor, Mu opioid receptor, MOP, hMOP

2 Images
Immunohistochemistry (Formalin/PFA-fixed paraffin-embedded sections) - Anti-Mu Opioid Receptor antibody (AB217766)
  • IHC-P

Supplier Data

Immunohistochemistry (Formalin/PFA-fixed paraffin-embedded sections) - Anti-Mu Opioid Receptor antibody (AB217766)

Immunohistochemical analysis of formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded skin tissue labeling Mu Opioid Receptor with ab217766 at 1/100 dilution, followed by conjugation to the secondary antibody and DAB staining.

Immunohistochemistry (Formalin/PFA-fixed paraffin-embedded sections) - Anti-Mu Opioid Receptor antibody (AB217766)
  • IHC-P

Supplier Data

Immunohistochemistry (Formalin/PFA-fixed paraffin-embedded sections) - Anti-Mu Opioid Receptor antibody (AB217766)

Immunohistochemical analysis of formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded mouse hindfoot tumor tissue labeling Mu Opioid Receptor with ab217766 at 1/100 dilution, followed by conjugation to the secondary antibody and DAB staining.

Key facts

Host species

Rabbit

Clonality

Polyclonal

Isotype

IgG

Carrier free

No

Reacts with

Mouse

Applications

IHC-P

applications

Immunogen

Synthetic Peptide within Human OPRM1 aa 150-250 conjugated to Keyhole Limpet Haemocyanin. The exact immunogen used to generate this antibody is proprietary information.

P35372

Reactivity data

{ "title": "Reactivity Data", "filters": { "stats": ["", "Species", "Dilution Info", "Notes"], "tabs": { "all-applications": {"fullname" : "All Applications", "shortname": "All Applications"}, "IHCP" : {"fullname" : "Immunohistochemistry (Formalin/PFA-fixed paraffin-embedded sections)", "shortname":"IHC-P"} }, "product-promise": { "all": "all", "testedAndGuaranteed": "tested", "guaranteed": "expected", "predicted": "predicted", "notRecommended": "not-recommended" } }, "values": { "Human": { "IHCP-species-checked": "predicted", "IHCP-species-dilution-info": "", "IHCP-species-notes": "" }, "Mouse": { "IHCP-species-checked": "testedAndGuaranteed", "IHCP-species-dilution-info": "1/100 - 1/500", "IHCP-species-notes": "<p></p>" }, "Rat": { "IHCP-species-checked": "predicted", "IHCP-species-dilution-info": "", "IHCP-species-notes": "" } } }

Properties and storage information

Form
Liquid
Purification technique
Affinity purification Protein A
Storage buffer
pH: 7.4 Preservative: 0.02% Proclin 300 Constituents: 50% Glycerol (glycerin, glycerine), 48.98% TBS, 1X, 1% BSA
Shipped at conditions
Blue Ice
Appropriate short-term storage duration
1-2 weeks
Appropriate short-term storage conditions
+4°C
Appropriate long-term storage conditions
-20°C
Aliquoting information
Upon delivery aliquot
Storage information
Avoid freeze / thaw cycle

Supplementary information

This supplementary information is collated from multiple sources and compiled automatically.

The Mu Opioid Receptor also known as MOR mu receptor or mu opiate receptor represents an important protein involved in pain and reward mechanisms. It is a G-protein coupled receptor with a mass of approximately 45 kDa. This receptor shows broad expression in the central nervous system with significant presence in areas such as the brainstem thalamus and spinal cord. MORs have a high affinity for endogenous opioids such as endorphins as well as exogenous opioid drugs like morphine.
Biological function summary

The Mu Opioid Receptor plays an essential role in modulating pain perception and response to opioids. It interacts predominantly with inhibitory G-proteins reducing neuronal excitability by decreasing cAMP levels and increasing potassium ion conductance. MORs are part of opioid receptor family which also includes delta and kappa receptors forming a complex regulatory system for the opioid signaling pathways. These receptors also modulate the release of neurotransmitters like GABA and dopamine.

Pathways

Signaling through the Mu Opioid Receptor integrates with the analgesic and reward pathways. It is important in the pain modulation pathway where it influences the perception of and response to pain stimuli. MORs interact with proteins such as adenylate cyclase and beta-arrestin which mediate desensitization and down-regulation processes. This interaction can also modulate the activity of dopamine pathways further linking MOR to reward and addiction mechanisms.

The Mu Opioid Receptor is closely connected to conditions like addiction and chronic pain. Anomalies in MOR function or expression can lead to an increased risk of opioid addiction due to its pivotal role in the reward pathway. Additionally chronic pain conditions might involve altered MOR signaling or density impacting pain management. Understanding MOR interactions with proteins like dopamine receptors can provide deeper insights into Huntington’s disease and the role of opioid receptors in its pathology.

Product protocols

For this product, it's our understanding that no specific protocols are required. You can visit:

Target data

Receptor for endogenous opioids such as beta-endorphin and endomorphin (PubMed : 10529478, PubMed : 12589820, PubMed : 7891175, PubMed : 7905839, PubMed : 7957926, PubMed : 9689128). Receptor for natural and synthetic opioids including morphine, heroin, DAMGO, fentanyl, etorphine, buprenorphin and methadone (PubMed : 10529478, PubMed : 10836142, PubMed : 12589820, PubMed : 19300905, PubMed : 7891175, PubMed : 7905839, PubMed : 7957926, PubMed : 9689128). Also activated by enkephalin peptides, such as Met-enkephalin or Met-enkephalin-Arg-Phe, with higher affinity for Met-enkephalin-Arg-Phe (By similarity). Agonist binding to the receptor induces coupling to an inactive GDP-bound heterotrimeric G-protein complex and subsequent exchange of GDP for GTP in the G-protein alpha subunit leading to dissociation of the G-protein complex with the free GTP-bound G-protein alpha and the G-protein beta-gamma dimer activating downstream cellular effectors (PubMed : 7905839). The agonist- and cell type-specific activity is predominantly coupled to pertussis toxin-sensitive G(i) and G(o) G alpha proteins, GNAI1, GNAI2, GNAI3 and GNAO1 isoforms Alpha-1 and Alpha-2, and to a lesser extent to pertussis toxin-insensitive G alpha proteins GNAZ and GNA15 (PubMed : 12068084). They mediate an array of downstream cellular responses, including inhibition of adenylate cyclase activity and both N-type and L-type calcium channels, activation of inward rectifying potassium channels, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), phospholipase C (PLC), phosphoinositide/protein kinase (PKC), phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) and regulation of NF-kappa-B (By similarity). Also couples to adenylate cyclase stimulatory G alpha proteins (By similarity). The selective temporal coupling to G-proteins and subsequent signaling can be regulated by RGSZ proteins, such as RGS9, RGS17 and RGS4 (By similarity). Phosphorylation by members of the GPRK subfamily of Ser/Thr protein kinases and association with beta-arrestins is involved in short-term receptor desensitization (By similarity). Beta-arrestins associate with the GPRK-phosphorylated receptor and uncouple it from the G-protein thus terminating signal transduction (By similarity). The phosphorylated receptor is internalized through endocytosis via clathrin-coated pits which involves beta-arrestins (By similarity). The activation of the ERK pathway occurs either in a G-protein-dependent or a beta-arrestin-dependent manner and is regulated by agonist-specific receptor phosphorylation (By similarity). Acts as a class A G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) which dissociates from beta-arrestin at or near the plasma membrane and undergoes rapid recycling (By similarity). Receptor down-regulation pathways are varying with the agonist and occur dependent or independent of G-protein coupling (By similarity). Endogenous ligands induce rapid desensitization, endocytosis and recycling (By similarity). Heterooligomerization with other GPCRs can modulate agonist binding, signaling and trafficking properties (By similarity).. Isoform 12. Couples to GNAS and is proposed to be involved in excitatory effects.. Isoform 16. Does not bind agonists but may act through oligomerization with binding-competent OPRM1 isoforms and reduce their ligand binding activity.. Isoform 17. Does not bind agonists but may act through oligomerization with binding-competent OPRM1 isoforms and reduce their ligand binding activity.
See full target information OPRM1

Publications (2)

Recent publications for all applications. Explore the full list and refine your search

Journal of materials chemistry. B 13:11855-11869 PubMed40891293

2025

Evaluation of peripheral analgesia in a rat incisional pain model using degradable hydrophilic microspheres for sustained delivery of buprenorphine.

Applications

Unspecified application

Species

Unspecified reactive species

Laurent Bédouet,Anne Beilvert,Emeline Servais,Florentina Pascale,Saïda Homayra Ghegediban,Michel Wassef,Julien Namur,Laurence Moine

Cell reports. Medicine 5:101505 PubMed38614095

2024

Macrophage-coated tumor cluster aggravates hepatoma invasion and immunotherapy resistance via generating local immune deprivation.

Applications

Unspecified application

Species

Unspecified reactive species

Junya Ning,Yingnan Ye,Hongru Shen,Runjiao Zhang,Huikai Li,Tianqiang Song,Rui Zhang,Pengpeng Liu,Guidong Chen,Hailong Wang,Fenglin Zang,Xiangchun Li,Jinpu Yu
View all publications

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