Articles: neuropathic-pain.
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Cell. Mol. Neurobiol. · Oct 2016
The Central Analgesic Mechanism of YM-58483 in Attenuating Neuropathic Pain in Rats.
Calcium channel antagonists are commonly used to treat neuropathic pain. Their analgesic effects rely on inhibiting long-term potentiation, and neurotransmitters release in the spinal cord. Store-operated Ca(2+)channels (SOCCs) are highly Ca(2+)-selective cation channels broadly expressed in non-excitable cells and some excitable cells. ⋯ Western blot showed that YM-58483 could decrease the levels of P-ERK and P-CREB (n = 10, #P < 0.05), without affecting the expression of CD11b and GFAP (n = 10, #P > 0.05). YM-58483 also inhibited the release of spinal cord IL-1β, TNF-α, and PGE2, compared with control + vehicle (n = 5, #P < 0.001). The analgesic mechanism of YM-58483 may be via inhibiting central ERK/CREB signaling in the neurons and decreasing central IL-1β, TNF-α, and PGE2 release to reduce neuronal excitability in the spinal dorsal horn of the SNL rats.
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Chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain (CINP) remains a major unmet medical need. Estrogen receptor beta (ERβ)-selective agonists represent a novel strategy for treating CINP because they are neuroprotective and may also have anticancer activity. We confirmed that ERβ-selective agonists have antiallodynic effects in the spinal nerve ligation model of neuropathic pain. ⋯ The efficacy and potency of ERβ-agonists was greater in male rats than females. To address the possibility that AC-186 might stimulate proliferation of cancers, rendering it unsuitable for treating CINP, we evaluated proliferative effects of AC-186 on prostate cancer cells and found it inhibited growth (LNCaP cells) or had no effect (PC3 cells) on these cells. Thus, ERβ-selective agonists exhibit potential for treating CINP.
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Neuroscience letters · Sep 2016
Inhibition of HCN channel activity in the thalamus attenuates chronic pain in rats.
Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels regulate neuronal excitability in both peripheral and central nerve systems. Emerging evidence indicates that HCN channels are involved in the development and maintenance of chronic pain. However, the impact of HCN channel activity in the thalamus on chronic pain has not been examined. ⋯ We show that ZD7288 dose-dependently attenuated mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia in rats with chronic pain. In the thalamus, immunoreactivity of both HCN1 and HCN2 subunits was increased in both rat models. These results suggest that the increased HCN channel activity in the thalamus of the ascending nociceptive pathway contributes to both chronic neuropathic and inflammatory pain conditions.
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Spinal plasticity, a key process mediating neuropathic pain development, requires ubiquitination-dependent protein turnover. Presynaptic active zone proteins have a crucial role in regulating vesicle exocytosis, which is essential for synaptic plasticity. Nevertheless, the mechanism for ubiquitination-regulated turnover of presynaptic active zone proteins in the progression of spinal plasticity-associated neuropathic pain remains unclear. Here, after research involving Sprague Dawley rats, we reported that spinal nerve ligation (SNL), in addition to causing allodynia, enhances the Rab3-interactive molecule-1α (RIM1α), a major active zone protein presumed to regulate neural plasticity, specifically in the synaptic plasma membranes (SPMs) of the ipsilateral dorsal horn. Spinal RIM1α-associated allodynia was mediated by Fbxo3, which abates Fbxl2-dependent RIM1α ubiquitination. Subsequently, following deubiquitination, enhanced RIM1α directly binds to CaV2.2, resulting in increased CaV2.2 expression in the SPMs of the dorsal horn. While exhibiting no effect on Fbxo3/Fbxl2 signaling, the focal knockdown of spinal RIM1α expression reversed the SNL-induced allodynia and increased spontaneous EPSC (sEPSC) frequency by suppressing RIM1α-facilitated CaV2.2 expression in the dorsal horn. Intrathecal applications of BC-1215 (a Fbxo3 activity inhibitor), Fbxl2 mRNA-targeting small-interfering RNA, and ω-conotoxin GVIA (a CaV2.2 blocker) attenuated RIM1α upregulation, enhanced RIM1α expression, and exhibited no effect on RIM1α expression, respectively. These results confirm the prediction that spinal presynaptic Fbxo3-dependent Fbxl2 ubiquitination promotes the subsequent RIM1α/CaV2.2 cascade in SNL-induced neuropathic pain. Our findings identify a role of the presynaptic active zone protein in pain-associated plasticity. That is, RIM1α-facilitated CaV2.2 expression plays a role in the downstream signaling of Fbxo3-dependent Fbxl2 ubiquitination/degradation to promote spinal plasticity underlying the progression of nociceptive hypersensitivity following neuropathic injury. ⋯ Ubiquitination is a well known process required for protein degradation. Studies investigating pain pathology have demonstrated that ubiquitination contributes to chronic pain by regulating the turnover of synaptic proteins. Here, we found that the spinal presynaptic active zone protein Rab3-interactive molecule-1α (RIM1α) participates in neuropathic pain development by binding to and upregulating the expression of CaV2.2. In addition, Fbxo3 modifies this pathway by inhibiting Fbxl2-mediated RIM1α ubiquitination, suggesting that presynaptic protein ubiquitination makes a crucial contribution to the development of neuropathic pain. Research in this area, now in its infancy, could potentially provide a novel therapeutic strategy for pain relief.
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Exercise is known to exert a systemic anti-inflammatory influence, but whether its effects are sufficient to protect against subsequent neuropathic pain is underinvestigated. We report that 6 weeks of voluntary wheel running terminating before chronic constriction injury (CCI) prevented the full development of allodynia for the ∼3-month duration of the injury. Neuroimmune signaling was assessed at 3 and 14 days after CCI. ⋯ Last, unrestricted voluntary wheel running, beginning either the day of, or 2 weeks after, CCI, progressively reversed neuropathic pain. This study is the first to investigate the behavioral and neuroimmune consequences of regular exercise terminating before nerve injury. This study suggests that chronic pain should be considered a component of "the diseasome of physical inactivity," and that an active lifestyle may prevent neuropathic pain.