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Publication : Molecular characterization of a peripheral receptor for cannabinoids.

First Author  Munro S Year  1993
Journal  Nature Volume  365
Issue  6441 Pages  61-5
PubMed ID  7689702 Mgi Jnum  J:46599
Mgi Id  MGI:1201466 Doi  10.1038/365061a0
Citation  Munro S, et al. (1993) Molecular characterization of a peripheral receptor for cannabinoids [see comments]. Nature 365(6441):61-5
abstractText  The major active ingredient of marijuana, delta 9-tetrahydrocannabinol (delta 9-THC), has been used as a psychoactive agent for thousands of years. Marijuana, and delta 9-THC, also exert a wide range of other effects including analgesia, anti-inflammation, immunosuppression, anticonvulsion, alleviation of intraocular pressure in glaucoma, and attenuation of vomiting. The clinical application of cannabinoids has, however, been limited by their psychoactive effects, and this has led to interest in the biochemical bases of their action. Progress stemmed initially from the synthesis of potent derivatives of delta 9-THC, and more recently from the cloning of a gene encoding a G-protein-coupled receptor for cannabinoids. This receptor is expressed in the brain but not in the periphery, except for a low level in testes. It has been proposed that the nonpsychoactive effects of cannabinoids are either mediated centrally or through direct interaction with other, non-receptor proteins. Here we report the cloning of a receptor for cannabinoids that is not expressed in the brain but rather in macrophages in the marginal zone of spleen.
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