• Neuroscience · Jan 2005

    alpha2-adrenoceptors inhibit the intracellular Ca2+ response to electrical stimulation in normal and injured sensory neurons, with increased inhibition of calcitonin gene-related peptide expressing neurons after injury.

    • J C Eisenach, Y Zhang, and F Duflo.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Center for the Study of Pharmacologic Plasticity in the Presence of Pain, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem, NC 27157, USA. eisenach@wfubmc.edu
    • Neuroscience. 2005 Jan 1; 131 (1): 189-97.

    AbstractNerve injury resulting in chronic pain is associated with novel excitatory effects of norepinephrine on injured peripheral nerve terminals and their cell bodies, due to actions on alpha2-adrenoceptors. Paradoxically, alpha2-adrenoceptor agonists administered near peripheral terminals or their cell bodies results in analgesia, not pain. This study tested, using intracellular Ca2+ response to stimulation, the effects of alpha2-adrenoceptor agonists on injured sensory neurons and classified their neuronal phenotype. Dorsal root ganglion cells from normal and spinal nerve-ligated rats were dissociated and activated twice with electrical field stimulation, while measuring Fura-2 fluorescence. Cells were perfused between stimulations with vehicle or alpha2-adrenoceptor agonists alone or with antagonists. Cells were considered inhibited if the ratio of their peak Ca2+ response to the second stimulus divided by the first was less than the 2.5th percentile for vehicle controls. alpha2-, But not alpha1-adrenoceptor agonists inhibited the Ca2+ response in a concentration related fashion, and this inhibition was blocked by alpha2-adrenoceptor antagonists. Clonidine inhibited a similar percentage of cells in the normal and spinal nerve-ligated group. In both groups, the large majority of clonidine-inhibited cells stained for isolectin B4. Spinal nerve ligation resulted in a 4-10-fold increase in the percentage of clonidine inhibited cells which immunostained for calcitonin gene-related peptide. These data are consistent with the known inhibition of Ca2+ currents by alpha2-adrenoceptors and suggest that, at the level of intracellular Ca2+, the key determinant of neurotransmitter release, alpha2-adrenoceptors are inhibitory after nerve injury, not excitatory. There is a shift in phenotype of sensory neurons which are inhibited by clonidine after nerve injury, which may explain clonidine's increased potency in the treatment of neuropathic compared with acute pain.

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