The European journal of neuroscience
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Comparative Study
Tumor necrosis factor receptor type-1 in sensory neurons contributes to induction of chronic enhancement of inflammatory hyperalgesia in rat.
Carrageenan-induced inflammatory pain lasting hours to days produces a protein kinase C epsilon (PKC epsilon )-dependent 'primed' state lasting several weeks, during which time injection of prostaglandin E2 induces hyperalgesia which is markedly enhanced and prolonged compared to PGE2-induced hyperalgesia in normal 'unprimed' rats. In the present study, we demonstrate that while inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis and antagonism of beta2-adrenergic receptors markedly attenuated the hyperalgesia induced by carrageenan, these interventions did not affect hyperalgesic priming. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (rat recombinant; rrTNFalpha), another mediator of carrageenan-induced inflammation, alone produced hyperalgesia and priming, which were attenuated and prevented, respectively, by intrathecal administration of antisense to PKC epsilon. ⋯ Intrathecal administration of antisense to tumour necrosis factor receptor type-1 (TNFR1) reduced the level of TNFR1 transported toward the peripheral terminals of sensory neurons, and attenuated both carrageenan- and rrTNFalpha-induced priming. Acute hyperalgesia induced by carrageenan or rrTNFalpha remained intact in animals treated with TNFR1 antisense. Our results demonstrate that the generation of the primed state does not require production of hyperalgesia and that TNFalpha, which is generated during acute inflammation, can act on sensory neurons to induce hyperalgesic priming by activating neuronal PKC epsilon.
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A subset of GABAergic neurons projecting to the medial septum has long been described in the hippocampus. However, the lack of information about their local connectivity pattern or their correspondence with any of the well-established hippocampal interneuron types has hampered the understanding of their functional role. Retrograde tracing combined with immunostaining for neurochemical markers in the adult rat hippocampus showed that nearly all hippocampo-septal (HS) neurons express somatostatin (>95%) and, in the hilus and CA3 stratum lucidum, many contain calretinin (>45%). ⋯ In addition, double retrograde labelling experiments revealed that many CA1-HS neurons of the dorsal hippocampus also have collateral projections to the ventral hippocampus. Thus, CA1-HS cells innervate inhibitory interneurons locally and in remote hippocampal regions, in addition to targeting mostly GABAergic neurons in the medial septum. This dual projection with striking target selectivity for GABAergic neurons may be ideally suited to synchronize neuronal activity along the septo-hippocampal axis.
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Comparative Study
A subpopulation of rats show social and sleep-waking changes typical of chronic neuropathic pain following peripheral nerve injury.
Neuropathic conditions for which treatment is sought, the so-called chronic pain syndrome, are characterized usually by complex behavioural disturbances as well as pain. In this study we evaluated whether social behavioural and sleep disruptions occurred after nerve injury. Before and after chronic constriction of the sciatic nerve, resident-intruder and sleep-wake cycles, as well as mechanical and thermal allodynia/hyperalgesia, were quantified. ⋯ Our finding that the degree of 'pain' as inferred from the allodynia/hyperalgesia was identical in all animals suggests that the alterations to resident-intruder and sleep-wake cycles were independent of the level of sensory disturbance. An absence of correlation between intensity of sensory disturbances and measures of disability (loss of sleep, familial/social problems) is also characteristic of human neuropathic pain. These data indicate that: (i) in a subpopulation of animals sciatic injury results in two of the major complex behavioural changes which are characteristic of neuropathic pain in humans; (ii) testing only for allodynia and hyperalgesia is not sufficient to detect this subpopulation.
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Large amounts of d-2-hydroxyglutaric acid (DGA) accumulate in d-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria (D-2-OHGA), an inherited neurometabolic disorder characterized by severe neurological dysfunction and cerebral atrophy. Despite the significant brain abnormalities, the neurotoxic mechanisms of brain injury in this disease are virtually unknown. In this work, the in vitro effect of DGA on various parameters of oxidative stress was investigated; namely chemiluminescence, thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBA-RS), total radical-trapping antioxidant potential (TRAP), total antioxidant reactivity (TAR) and the activities of the antioxidant enzymes catalase, glutathione peroxidase and superoxide dismutase in cerebral cortex from 30-day-old-rats. ⋯ Furthermore, the DGA-induced increase of TBA-RS was fully prevented by the free radical scavengers ascorbic acid plus Trolox (water-soluble alpha-tocopherol) and attenuated by the inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), suggesting the role of superoxide, hydroxyl and nitric oxide radicals in this action. The data indicate a stimulation of lipid peroxidation through the production of free radicals and a reduction of the brain capacity to efficiently modulate the damage associated with the enhanced generation of free radicals by DGA. In the case that these findings also occur in human D-2-OHGA, it is feasible that oxidative stress may be involved in the pathophysiology of the brain injury observed in patients with this disease.