The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
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To characterize further the establishment of the opioid system during prenatal mouse development, we have examined the spatial and temporal expression patterns of mu, kappa, and delta opioid receptor mRNAs and find that the expression patterns of these mRNAs are distinct at all ages. Within the embryo, kappa is the first opioid receptor expressed, with transcripts detected in the gut epithelium as early as embryonic day 9.5 (E9.5). By E10.5, mu receptor expression is first detected in the facial-vestibulocochlear preganglion complex, whereas delta receptor mRNA is first detected at E12.5 in several peripheral tissues, including the olfactory epithelium, heart, limb bud, and tooth. ⋯ Mu receptor is the first opioid receptor expressed in the spinal cord, at E11.5. These results extend previous ligand-binding data to significantly earlier ages and suggest that early developmental events in both neural and non-neural tissues may be modulated by opioid receptors. Several examples of possible autocrine and paracrine loops of opioid peptide and receptor expression have been identified, suggesting a role for these local circuits in developmental processes.