Tag: biased agonism


  • Opioid Receptors in Motion Reveal Paths to Safer Painkillers

    Opioid Receptors in Motion Reveal Paths to Safer Painkillers

    Unlocking the Dynamics of Mu-Opioid Receptors For decades, scientists have understood that opioids alleviate pain by binding to mu-opioid receptors in the brain and nervous system. Yet the precise chain of events that follows this binding remained cloudy. Recent research, focusing on the real-time behavior of these molecular switches, is shedding light on why some…

  • Opioid Receptors in Motion Offer Clues for Safer Painkillers

    Opioid Receptors in Motion Offer Clues for Safer Painkillers

    Understanding the Moving Target: What Mu-Opioid Receptors Do For decades, scientists have known that opioids relieve pain by binding to mu-opioid receptors in the brain. What has remained murkier is how this binding translates into the complex cascade that controls pain, mood, breathing, and reward. A new wave of research tracks these receptors in motion,…