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Re: coffee beans--an opioid angle?

Posted by jd on January 19, 2000, at 23:54:48

In reply to Re: my coffee bean anecdote, posted by jd on January 19, 2000, at 23:06:44

I couldn't resist looking up the opioid/coffee connection mentioned by Brandon. (Partly for personal reasons, I'm a big "responser" to opiates...) Anyhow, below is a cite from PubMed. Though I'd like to think it's an answer to Lucia's coffee bean mystery, two things go a bit against this: (1) the chemicals are opiate *antagonists*, i.e., more like naltrexone than an immediate euphoric like morphine; and (2) they're apparently in instant coffee too, not just the beans (though I'm actually not sure about the brewed stuff.) Food (or drink) for thought, in any case...
--jd

Nature 1983 Jan 20;301(5897):246-8
Coffee contains potent opiate receptor binding activity.

Boublik JH, Quinn MJ, Clements JA, Herington AC, Wynne KN, Funder JW

Opiate receptor-active peptide fragments (exorphins) have been identified recently in casein and gluten hydrolysates, and morphine has been found in bovine and human milk. To determine whether similar peptides or alkaloids occur in other foodstuffs, we have screened potential sources using a rat brain homogenate assay to detect opiate receptor activity. We report here that instant coffee powders from a variety of manufacturers compete with tritiated naloxone for binding to opiate receptors in the rat brain membrane preparations, with no significant difference between normal and decaffeinated coffee. The receptor binding activity resembles that seen with opiate antagonists, in that there was no change in the half-maximal effective dose (ED50) in the presence of 100 mM Na+; on bioassay, the activity was similarly shown to be antagonistic and specific for opiate-induced inhibition of twitch. Preliminary characterization of the activity reveals that it has a molecular weight (MW) in the range 1,000-3,500, is heat-stable, ether-extractable, not modified by enzymatic digestion with papain, and clearly separable from caffeine and morphine on TLC. As its concentration in an average cup of coffee is five times the ED50, these data suggest that drinking coffee may be followed by effects mediated via opiate receptors, as well as effects of caffeine.


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