The single-cell opioid responses in the context of HIV (SCORCH) consortium
Ament S, Campbell R, Lobo M, Receveur J, Agrawal K, Borjabad A, Byrareddy S, Chang L, Clarke D, Emani P, Gabuzda D, Gaulton K, Giglio M, Giorgi F, Gok B, Guda C, Hadas E, Herb B, Hu W, Huttner A, Ishmam M, Jacobs M, Kelschenbach J, Kim D, Lee C, Liu S, Liu X, Madras B, Mahurkar A, Mash D, Mukamel E, Niu M, O’Connor R, Pagan C, Pang A, Pillai P, Repunte-Canonigo V, Ruzicka W, Stanley J, Tickle T, Tsai S, Wang A, Wills L, Wilson A, Wright S, Xu S, Yang J, Zand M, Zhang L, Zhang J, Akbarian S, Buch S, Cheng C, Corley M, Fox H, Gerstein M, Gummuluru S, Heiman M, Ho Y, Kellis M, Kenny P, Kluger Y, Milner T, Moore D, Morgello S, Ndhlovu L, Rana T, Sanna P, Satterlee J, Sestan N, Spector S, Spudich S, Tilgner H, Volsky D, White O, Williams D, Zeng H. The single-cell opioid responses in the context of HIV (SCORCH) consortium. Molecular Psychiatry 2024, 29: 3950-3961. PMID: 38879719, PMCID: PMC11609103, DOI: 10.1038/s41380-024-02620-7.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchContext of human immunodeficiency virusHuman immunodeficiency virusSubstance use disordersOpioid responseAnimal modelsEffects of substance use disordersOpioid pain medicationsPrevalence of co-morbid conditionsChronic pain syndromesStage of diseaseCell typesAffected cell typesCo-morbid conditionsPain syndromeImmunodeficiency virusPain medicationOpioid addictionIncreased riskRisk factorsHuman cohortsDrug addictionBrain tissue collectionBrain cell typesTissue collectionSingle-cell level
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