Short Decsription
Creative Biolabs offers CHO dhfr--Tg(Rat mu Receptor) Division-Arrested Cell which mu receptor stably expressed in CHO cells which lack the dhfr.
Description
CHO dhfr--Tg(Rat mu Receptor) Division-Arrested Cell was engineered to express the receptor rat mu (L13069). This cell line can be used to study mu receptor function, signaling pathways, and potential therapeutic interventions. Dividing-arrest cells are cells that are normally kept under specific culture conditions or treated with agents that prevent cell division from being held in a non-dividing state. This can be achieved through methods such as serum starvation, chemical inhibitors of cell cycle progression, or genetic modification.
Features
Well-characterized stable cell lines;
for cell-based high-throughput screening;
Low-cost evaluation of stable cell lines or limited quantities of compounds.
Applications
mu receptor function, signaling pathways, and potential therapeutic interventions.
Protein Target
GPCR
Receptor Name
mu
Receptor Family
Opioid
Species
Rat
Parental Cell Line
CHO dhfr-
Transfection
Full-length rat Oprm1 opioid receptor cDNA (GenBank Accession Number L13069)
Gene
L13069
Background
Mu opioid receptor (MOR) is a receptor for beta-endorphin, inhibits neurotransmitter release by reducing calcium ion currents and increasing potassium ion conductance. MOR signaling and regulation are strongly agonist-dependent. MOR mediates positive reinforcement following direct (morphine) or indirect (alcohol, cannabinoids, nicotine) activation. MOR plays a genetic role in the control of gut inflammation. MOR-deficient mice are highly susceptible to colon inflammation, with a 50% mortality rate occurring 3 days after administration of TNBS that induces inflammation. MOR agonists regulate cytokine production and T cell proliferation and might be new therapeutic molecules in inflammatory bowel disease.

For Research Use Only | Not For Clinical Use

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