I have recently been reading up on bacterial transformation, and an interesting thought crossed my head.
β-endorphin is a naturally produced protein that agonizes μ-opioid receptors.
What do you think would happen if someone took the gene that synthesizes β-endorphin, and used that gene to make custom plasmid DNA with the β-endorphin production gene loaded on to it? I don't know exactly how plasmids are synthetically produced, but I do know that humans can synthetically manufacture them and you can order plasmids of your own specifications online. Anyways, if you took a bottle of these plasmids, and introduced them into heat-shocked bacteria (similar to the pGLO experiment that every bio major in college does), would the bacteria take up these plasmids, and then start producing β-endorphins? After bacteria have produced the β-endorphin, you could easily use a centrifuge to separate the β-endorphin from the bacteria.
So what do you guys think? I have no idea whether it would work or not, let me know what you think!
As a side note, β-endorphin is not permeable through the blood-brain barrier, but it's an interesting thought nonetheless. Maybe there is another type of naturally occurring opiate protein that is permeable through the blood brain barrier? I can think of an interesting lab experiment you could try on...rats...yeah, rats would work
by the way, β-endorphin is approximately 80x more potent than morphine.
β-endorphin is a naturally produced protein that agonizes μ-opioid receptors.
What do you think would happen if someone took the gene that synthesizes β-endorphin, and used that gene to make custom plasmid DNA with the β-endorphin production gene loaded on to it? I don't know exactly how plasmids are synthetically produced, but I do know that humans can synthetically manufacture them and you can order plasmids of your own specifications online. Anyways, if you took a bottle of these plasmids, and introduced them into heat-shocked bacteria (similar to the pGLO experiment that every bio major in college does), would the bacteria take up these plasmids, and then start producing β-endorphins? After bacteria have produced the β-endorphin, you could easily use a centrifuge to separate the β-endorphin from the bacteria.
So what do you guys think? I have no idea whether it would work or not, let me know what you think!
As a side note, β-endorphin is not permeable through the blood-brain barrier, but it's an interesting thought nonetheless. Maybe there is another type of naturally occurring opiate protein that is permeable through the blood brain barrier? I can think of an interesting lab experiment you could try on...rats...yeah, rats would work
