Neuropharmacology
-
GABA-A receptor positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) mediate robust analgesia in animal models of pathological pain, in part via enhancing injury-induced loss of GABA-A-α2 and -α3 receptor function within the spinal cord. As yet, a lack of clinically suitable tool compounds has prevented this concept being tested in humans. Prior to assessing the efficacy of GABA-A receptor PAMs in a human volunteer pain model we have compared compounds capable of variously modulating GABA-A receptor function in comparable rat models of capsaicin-induced acute nocifensive flinching behaviour and secondary mechanical hypersensitivity. ⋯ This was surprising as both NS11394 and TPA023 robustly attenuated late phase (6-30 min post-injection) capsaicin-induced flinching, a pain-like behaviour that is putatively driven by peripheral and central sensitizing mechanisms. Diazepam also attenuated capsaicin-induced nocifensive behaviours, albeit at doses previously shown to impair locomotor function. Our data indicate that GABA-A receptor PAMs with optimal selectivity and efficacy profiles reduce centrally-mediated mechanical hypersensitivity in capsaicin-injected rats, an observation that we expect can translate directly to human volunteer studies.
-
GABA(B) receptor antagonists have been shown to have antidepressant-like properties in animal models and thus, could represent a novel approach for the treatment of depression. The neurobiological mechanisms underlying these effects are currently unknown. Adult hippocampal neurogenesis (the birth of new neurons) is thought to play a role in antidepressant drug action. ⋯ This topographical segregation concurs with the hypothesis that the ventral hippocampus is primarily involved in the regulation of stress and emotionality. Taken together, our data suggest that increased hippocampal cell proliferation is a plausible mechanism for the antidepressant-like effects of GABA(B) receptor antagonists following chronic but not acute treatments. Moreover, altered behavioural effects in the FST does not correlate with changes in neurogenesis.
-
Diabetes is often associated with painful neuropathy. The current treatments are symptomatic and ineffective. Cannabinoids have been proposed as promising drugs for chronic pain treatment and its antinociceptive effect has already been related in nerve injury models of neuropathic pain, but little has been investigated in painful diabetic neuropathy models. ⋯ In Ngl rats, the antinociceptive effect of AM404 was prevented by AM251 or capsazepine only during first phase of the formalin test while in Dbt rats, this effect was blocked by pretreatment with AM251 (both phases) or AM630 (second phase). Taken together, these results demonstrated broad-spectrum antinociceptive properties of cannabinoids in a model of painful diabetic neuropathy. Peripheral activation of both cannabinoid receptors seems to mediate the antinociceptive effect of exogenous or endogenous anandamide.