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Neuroscience letters · Jan 2008
Bee venom injection produces a peripheral anti-inflammatory effect by activation of a nitric oxide-dependent spinocoeruleus pathway.
- Seo-Yeon Yoon, Young-Bae Kwon, Hyun-Woo Kim, Dae-Hyun Roh, Hyoung-Sig Seo, Ho-Jae Han, Hye-Jung Lee, Alvin J Beitz, and Jang-Hern Lee.
- Biotherapy Human Resources Center, College of Veterinary Medicine, Chonnam National University, Gwang-ju, South Korea.
- Neurosci. Lett. 2008 Jan 10;430(2):163-8.
AbstractOur recent data, obtained using a zymosan-induced inflammatory air pouch model in mice, have demonstrated that subcutaneous bee venom (BV) injection into the hind limb selectively activates the contralateral brain stem locus coeruleus (LC) and then via a descending noradrenergic pathway and subsequent adrenal medullary catecholamine release induces a potent anti-inflammatory effect. While the efferent limb of this BV-induced neuroimmune anti-inflammatory pathway is well documented, the afferent limb of this pathway is poorly understood. In particular the spinal mechanisms involved with BV activation of the LC are currently unknown. Spinal nitric oxide (NO) and its synthase (NOS) have been shown to play an important role in the transmission and amplification of neuronal information from the spinal cord to the brain stem. In the present study we evaluated whether spinal NO plays a role in BV-induced LC activation, since we have previously shown that LC activation underlies this 'BV-induced anti-inflammatory effect' (BVAI) using the mouse air pouch model. Intrathecal (i.t.) pretreatment with l-nitro arginine methyl ester (l-NAME, non-selective NOS inhibitor), hemoglobin (NO scavenger) or 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4,3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ, soluble guanylate cyclase inhibitor) abolished BVAI on zymosan-induced leukocyte migration into the air pouch. Moreover, i.t. injection of l-N-iminoethyl-lysine (l-NIL, inducible NOS inhibitor), but not 7-nitroindazole (7-NI, neuronal NOS inhibitor), also inhibited BVAI. BV injection significantly increased both the number of Fos immunoreactive neurons and tyrosine hydroxylase-Fos double labeling neurons in the contralateral LC in zymosan-induced inflamed mice. Importantly this increase in Fos expression in the LC was also completely inhibited by i.t. injection of l-NIL, but not by i.t. injection of 7-NI. Collectively these results indicate that spinal NO generated from inducible NOS is involved in the BV-induced LC activation that underlies BVAI.
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