• Mol Pain · Jan 2023

    Phenotypic screen identifies the natural product silymarin as a novel anti-inflammatory analgesic.

    • Daniel M DuBreuil, Xiaofan Lai, Kevin Zhu, Gracesenia Chahyadinata, Caroline Perner, Brenda M Chiang, Ashley Battenberg, Caroline L Sokol, and Brian J Wainger.
    • Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
    • Mol Pain. 2023 Jan 1; 19: 1744806922114835117448069221148351.

    AbstractSensory neuron hyperexcitability is a critical driver of pathological pain and can result from axon damage, inflammation, or neuronal stress. G-protein coupled receptor signaling can induce pain amplification by modulating the activation of Trp-family ionotropic receptors and voltage-gated ion channels. Here, we sought to use calcium imaging to identify novel inhibitors of the intracellular pathways that mediate sensory neuron sensitization and lead to hyperexcitability. We identified a novel stimulus cocktail, consisting of the SSTR2 agonist L-054,264 and the S1PR3 agonist CYM5541, that elicits calcium responses in mouse primary sensory neurons in vitro as well as pain and thermal hypersensitivity in mice in vivo. We screened a library of 906 bioactive compounds and identified 24 hits that reduced calcium flux elicited by L-054,264/CYM5541. Among these hits, silymarin, a natural product derived from milk thistle, strongly reduced activation by the stimulation cocktail, as well as by a distinct inflammatory cocktail containing bradykinin and prostaglandin E2. Silymarin had no effect on sensory neuron excitability at baseline, but reduced calcium flux via Orai channels and downstream mediators of phospholipase C signaling. In vivo, silymarin pretreatment blocked development of adjuvant-mediated thermal hypersensitivity, indicating potential use as an anti-inflammatory analgesic.

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