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1.
J Physiol Sci ; 69(5): 769-777, 2019 Sep.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31267368

Operant methods that allow animals to avoid painful stimuli are interpreted to assess the aversive quality of pain; however, such measurements require investigator-initiated stimuli to animals. Here we developed a shuttle maze test to repeatedly assess activity associated nociception without forced stimulation. Rats ambulate back and forth between two treat feeders by taking either a short route with a prickly surfaced arch or a longer route with a smooth floor. L5-L6 spinal nerve ligation (SNL) reduced the preference for the short route with the arch, correlated with hypersensitivity in the hind paw. Oral gabapentin restored the short route preference and reduced hypersensitivity in SNL rats, and blockade of spinal α2-adrenoceptors reduced gabapentin's effects on hypersensitivity but not on preference index. These results suggest that SNL injury alters behavior in the shuttle maze test and that the shuttle maze test shows comparable results to reflexive hypersensitivity after SNL in magnitude and response to gabapentin.


Choice Behavior/physiology , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/physiopathology , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Food , Hyperalgesia/metabolism , Hyperalgesia/physiopathology , Ligation/methods , Male , Neuralgia/metabolism , Neuralgia/physiopathology , Pain Threshold/physiology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Spinal Nerves/metabolism , Spinal Nerves/physiopathology , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/metabolism
2.
Int J Mol Sci ; 20(4)2019 Feb 14.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30769838

Gabapentinoids (gabapentin and pregabalin) and antidepressants (tricyclic antidepressants and serotonin noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors) are often used to treat chronic pain. The descending noradrenergic inhibitory system from the locus coeruleus (LC) to the dorsal horn of the spinal cord plays an important role in the analgesic mechanisms of these drugs. Gabapentinoids activate the LC by inhibiting the release of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and inducing the release of glutamate, thereby increasing noradrenaline levels in the spinal cord. Antidepressants increase noradrenaline levels in the spinal cord by inhibiting reuptake, and accumulating noradrenaline inhibits chronic pain through α2-adrenergic receptors in the spinal cord. Recent animal studies, however, revealed that the function of the descending noradrenergic inhibitory system is impaired in chronic pain states. Other recent studies found that histone deacetylase inhibitors and antidepressants restore the impaired noradrenergic descending inhibitory system acting on noradrenergic neurons in the LC.


Chronic Pain/drug therapy , Norepinephrine/antagonists & inhibitors , Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2/genetics , Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors/administration & dosage , Animals , Antidepressive Agents, Tricyclic/administration & dosage , Chronic Pain/genetics , Chronic Pain/physiopathology , GABA Antagonists/administration & dosage , GABA Antagonists/metabolism , Gabapentin/administration & dosage , Humans , Locus Coeruleus/drug effects , Locus Coeruleus/physiopathology , Norepinephrine/genetics , Norepinephrine/metabolism , Pregabalin/administration & dosage , Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors/metabolism , Spinal Cord/drug effects , Spinal Cord/physiopathology , Spinal Cord Dorsal Horn/drug effects , Spinal Cord Dorsal Horn/physiopathology
3.
Adv Exp Med Biol ; 1099: 93-100, 2018.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30306517

Gabapentinoids are effective in a wide range of animal pain models and in patients with neuropathic pain and has become one of first-line treatments for neuropathic pain. Because spinal plasticity and sensitization have been intensely studied in neuropathic pain, most laboratory studies have focused on actions of gabapentinoids in the spinal cord, where they reduce primary afferent traffic and excitation of spinal nociceptive neurons, via interaction with α2δ subunits of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. However, a recent clinical study questioned the relevance of this in vitro and in vivo rodent studies by demonstrating a complete lack of clinical efficacy of intrathecal gabapentin in patients with chronic pain. Curiously, preclinical studies continue to focus on spinal cord actions of gabapentinoids despite this lack of translation to humans.We and others demonstrated that gabapentin inhibits presynaptic GABA release and induces glutamate release from astrocytes in the locus coeruleus (LC), thereby increasing LC neuron activity and spinal noradrenaline release, and that gabapentin relies on this action in the LC for its analgesia. We also recently discovered that, with prolonged time after neuropathic injury, noradrenergic neurons in the LC become less responsive to gabapentin, leading to impaired gabapentin analgesia, and that astroglial glutamate dysregulation is critical to this impaired LC response. The clinically available drug valproate increases glutamate transporter-1 (GLT-1) expression in the LC to restore this impaired gabapentin analgesia.


Analgesia , Gabapentin/pharmacology , Locus Coeruleus/physiology , Neuralgia/drug therapy , Norepinephrine/physiology , Animals , Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter 2/physiology , Glutamic Acid/physiology , Humans , Neurons/drug effects , Neurons/pathology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid
4.
Neurosci Lett ; 676: 41-45, 2018 05 29.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29627342

Locus coeruleus (LC)-spinal noradrenergic projections are important to endogenous analgesic mechanisms and can be activated by local glutamate signaling in the LC. The current study examined the local glutamatergic, GABAergic, and noradrenergic influences on glutamate release in the LC and noradrenergic descending inhibition in rats 6 weeks after spinal nerve ligation (SNL). Intra-LC injection of the α2 adrenoceptor antagonist idazoxan or the group 2 metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) antagonist (RS)-α-Methyl-4-tetrazolylphenylglycine (MTPG) increased withdrawal thresholds in SNL animals and this was reversed by the blockade of α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl- 4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors in the LC or α2-adrenoceptors in the spinal cord, but not in normal animals. Neither blockade of GABA-A nor GABA-B receptors in the LC affected withdrawal thresholds in normal and SNL animals. Intra-LC perfusion of idazoxan increased extracellular glutamate in the LC in SNL animals but not in normal animals. Intra-LC perfusion of MTPG increased extracellular glutamate in the LC in both normal and SNL animals. These results suggest that local noradrenaline and glutamate tonically inhibit glutamate release in the LC after peripheral nerve injury and this may contribute to reduced descending inhibition in response to noxious input during chronic neuropathic pain.


Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Locus Coeruleus/metabolism , Neural Inhibition , Neuralgia/metabolism , Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2/metabolism , Receptors, Metabotropic Glutamate/metabolism , Adrenergic alpha-2 Receptor Antagonists/administration & dosage , Animals , GABA Antagonists/administration & dosage , Idazoxan/administration & dosage , Locus Coeruleus/drug effects , Male , Neural Inhibition/drug effects , Pain Threshold , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Receptors, Metabotropic Glutamate/antagonists & inhibitors , Spinal Nerves/injuries , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/metabolism
5.
Biomed Res ; 37(5): 299-304, 2016.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27784873

Overactive bladder is one of the major health problem especially in elderly people. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is released from urinary bladder cells and acts as a smooth muscle contraction and sensory signal in micturition but little is known about the role of ATP release in the pathophysiology of overactive bladder. To assess the relationship between ATP and overactive bladder, we used a partial bladder outlet obstruction (pBOO) model in rats. The bladder caused several changes by pBOO: An increase in bladder weight, hypertrophy of sub-urothelium and sub-serosal area, and frequent non-voiding bladder contraction during urine storage. Basal ATP release from urothelium and serosa of pBOO rats was significantly higher than that of normal rats. Distentioninduced ATP release from urothelium of normal and pBOO rats had no significant change. However, distention-induced ATP release from serosa of pBOO rats was higher than that of normal. These findings may identify ATP especially released from serosa as one of causes of non-voiding contractions and overactive bladder symptoms.


Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Serous Membrane/metabolism , Urinary Bladder Neck Obstruction/metabolism , Urothelium/metabolism , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Rats , Serous Membrane/pathology , Urinary Bladder Neck Obstruction/pathology , Urinary Bladder Neck Obstruction/physiopathology , Urothelium/pathology
6.
Pain ; 157(9): 2024-2032, 2016 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27315512

Despite being one of the first-choice analgesics for chronic neuropathic pain, gabapentin sometimes fails to provide analgesia, but the mechanisms for this lack of efficacy is unclear. Rats with nerve injury including L5-L6 spinal nerve ligation (SNL) respond uniformly and well to gabapentin, but many of these studies are performed within just a few weeks of injury, questioning their relevance to chronic neuropathic pain. In this study, intraperitoneal gabapentin showed a time-dependently reduction in antihypersensitivity after SNL, associated with downregulation of astroglial glutamate transporter-1 (GLT-1) in the locus coeruleus (LC). Consistently, SNL also time-dependently increased basal but masked gabapentin-induced noradrenergic neuronal activity in the LC. In rats 2 weeks after SNL, knock-down of GLT-1 in the LC reduced the antihypersensitivity effect of gabapentin. In rats 8 weeks after SNL, increasing GLT-1 expression by histone deacetylase inhibitor valproate restored the antihypersensitivity effect of gabapentin, associated with restored gabapentin-induced noradrenergic neuronal activity in the LC and subsequent spinal noradrenaline release. Knock-down of GLT-1 in the LC reversed the effect of valproate to restore gabapentin-induced antihypersensitivity. In addition, the antihypersensitivity effect of the intrathecal α2-adrenoceptor agonist clonidine also decreased with time after SNL injury. These results suggest that downregulation of GLT-1 in the LC and reduced spinal noradrenergic inhibition contribute to impaired analgesic efficacy from gabapentin in chronic neuropathic pain and that valproate can rescue this impaired efficacy.


Amines/therapeutic use , Analgesics/therapeutic use , Cyclohexanecarboxylic Acids/therapeutic use , Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter 2/metabolism , Locus Coeruleus/metabolism , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/drug therapy , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/pathology , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/therapeutic use , Animals , Antihypertensive Agents/pharmacology , Atropine/pharmacology , Bronchodilator Agents/pharmacology , CREB-Binding Protein/metabolism , Clonidine/pharmacology , Disease Models, Animal , Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter 2/genetics , Gabapentin , Locus Coeruleus/drug effects , Male , Norepinephrine/metabolism , Pain Threshold/drug effects , RNA, Small Interfering/pharmacology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Spinal Cord Dorsal Horn/metabolism , Time Factors
7.
J Pain ; 17(2): 190-202, 2016 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26545342

UNLABELLED: Results of clinical studies suggest that descending inhibitory controls from the brainstem are important for speeding recovery from pain after surgery. We examined the effects of destroying spinally projecting noradrenergic neurons via intrathecally administered antibody to dopamine ß-hydroxylase conjugated to saporin (DßH-saporin) on recovery in an acute incisional pain model. Mechanical and thermal paw withdrawal thresholds and nonevoked spontaneous guarding scores were tested for several weeks postoperatively and analyzed using mixed effects growth curve modeling. DßH-saporin treatment resulted in a significant prolongation in the duration of mechanical and to a lesser degree thermal hypersensitivity in the ipsilateral paw of incised rats but did not increase the duration of spontaneous guarding. DßH-saporin treatment was also associated with increased microglial and astrocyte activation in the ipsilateral spinal cord 21 days after incision compared with immunoglobulin G-saporin treated controls. Chronic intrathecal administration of the α2 adrenergic receptor antagonist atipamezole (50-200 µg/d) produced similar effects. These data suggest that spinally projecting noradrenergic pathways and spinal α2 adrenergic receptor activation are important for speeding recovery from hypersensitivity after surgical incision possibly by reducing spinal glial activation. Interventions that augment the noradrenergic system might be important to speed recovery from pain after surgery. PERSPECTIVE: Endogenous descending spinal noradrenergic activation promotes resolution of incision-induced hypersensitivity and inhibits spinal microglial and astrocyte activation in part through α2 adrenergic receptors.


Adrenergic Neurons/metabolism , Adrenergic alpha-2 Receptor Antagonists/pharmacology , Neuroglia/metabolism , Pain, Postoperative/metabolism , Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2/metabolism , Recovery of Function/physiology , Signal Transduction/physiology , Spinal Cord/metabolism , Adrenergic Neurons/drug effects , Adrenergic alpha-2 Receptor Antagonists/administration & dosage , Animals , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Disease Models, Animal , Imidazoles/administration & dosage , Imidazoles/pharmacology , Male , Neuroglia/drug effects , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2/drug effects , Recovery of Function/drug effects , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Spinal Cord/drug effects
8.
Neurosci Lett ; 608: 18-22, 2015 Nov 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26450532

Descending noradrenergic inhibition to the spinal cord from the locus coeruleus (LC) is an important endogenous pain-relief mechanism which can be activated by local glutamate signaling. Here we tested whether dysregulation of extracellular glutamate level in the LC induced by down-regulating astroglial glutamate transporter-1(GLT-1) impairs endogenous analgesia. In rats treated with repeated LC injections of GLT-1 selective or non-targeting small interfering RNA (siRNA), a subdermal injection of capsaicin was used to examine noxious stimulation-induced analgesia (NSIA), evoked LC glutamate and spinal noradrenaline release, and evoked LC neuronal activity. LC-injected GLT-1 siRNA reduced expression of GLT-1 in the LC (P=0.02), increased basal activity of LC neurons (P<0.01), and increased basal extracellular concentrations of LC glutamate (P<0.01) and spinal noradrenaline (P<0.01), but did not affect mechanical withdrawal thresholds in the hindpaw (P=0.83), compared to non-targeting siRNA. LC-injected GLT-1 siRNA impaired capsaicin-evoked release of LC glutamate and spinal noradrenaline, capsaicin-evoked LC neuronal activation, and NSIA. These results suggest that astroglial GLT-1 is essential to normal LC function and that increased extracellular glutamate by down-regulating GLT-1 impairs evoked LC activity and NSIA, essentially taking the LC "off-line".


Astrocytes/metabolism , Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter 2/metabolism , Locus Coeruleus/metabolism , Pain/metabolism , Analgesia , Animals , Capsaicin/pharmacology , Down-Regulation , Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter 2/genetics , Gene Knockdown Techniques , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Male , Neurons/metabolism , Norepinephrine/metabolism , Pain/physiopathology , Pain Threshold/drug effects , RNA, Small Interfering/genetics , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Spinal Cord/metabolism
9.
Anesthesiology ; 123(4): 899-908, 2015 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26244888

BACKGROUND: Patients with neuropathic pain show reduced endogenous analgesia induced by a conditioned noxious stimulus. Here, the authors tested whether peripheral nerve injury impairs descending noradrenergic inhibition from the locus coeruleus (LC) after L5-L6 spinal nerve ligation (SNL) in rats. METHODS: A subdermal injection of capsaicin was used to examine noxious stimulation-induced analgesia (NSIA), evoked LC glutamate and spinal noradrenaline release, and evoked LC neuronal activity in normal and SNL rats. The authors also examined the role of presynaptic metabotropic glutamate receptors or the astroglial glutamate transporter-1 (GLT-1). RESULTS: SNL increased basal extracellular glutamate concentration in the LC (170.1%; 95% CI, 44.7 to 295.5; n = 15) and basal spinal cord noradrenaline release (252.1%; 95% CI, 113.6 to 391.3; n = 15), which was associated with an increased tonic LC neuronal activity and a down-regulation of GLT-1 in the LC. SNL reduced NSIA (-77.6%; 95% CI, -116.4 to -38.8; n = 14) and capsaicin evoked release of glutamate in the LC (-36.2%; 95% CI, -49.3 to -23.2; n = 8) and noradrenaline in the spinal cord (-38.8%; 95% CI, -45.1 to -32.5; n = 8). Capsaicin-evoked LC neuronal activation was masked in SNL rats. Removing autoinhibition of glutamatergic terminals by metabotropic glutamate receptor blockade or increasing GLT-1 expression by histone deacetylase inhibition restored NSIA in SNL rats. SNL-induced impairment of NSIA was mimicked in normal rats by knockdown of GLT-1 in the LC. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that increased extracellular glutamate in the LC consequent to down-regulation of GLT-1 contributes to LC dysfunction and impaired pain-evoked endogenous analgesia after nerve injury.


Analgesia/methods , Glutamic Acid/physiology , Locus Coeruleus/metabolism , Neuralgia/metabolism , Spinal Nerves/injuries , Spinal Nerves/metabolism , Animals , Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter 2/metabolism , Female , Male , Pain Measurement/drug effects , Pain Measurement/methods , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
10.
Anesthesiology ; 122(4): 895-907, 2015 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25581910

BACKGROUND: Chronic postsurgical pain, a significant public health problem, occurs in 10 to 50% of patients undergoing major surgery. Acute pain induces endogenous analgesia termed conditioned pain modulation (CPM), and the strength of CPM preoperatively predicts the likelihood of chronic postsurgical pain. The relation between CPM and recovery from surgery has not been examined in preclinical models. METHODS: CPM was assessed in individual rats and correlated with each animal's time course of recovery of hypersensitivity after partial spinal nerve ligation. The role of descending noradrenergic pathways in the spinal cord to mechanisms of CPM and recovery was tested using idazoxan to block noradrenergic receptors or antidopamine ß-hydroxylase-conjugated saporin to ablate these pathways. Behavioral hypersensitivity, static weight bearing, and spinal glial activation were measured after partial spinal nerve ligation. RESULTS: The strength of CPM varied over two-fold between individuals and was directly correlated with the slope of recovery from hypersensitivity after surgery (P < 0.0001; r = 0.660). CPM induced the release of norepinephrine in the spinal cord and was partially blocked by intrathecal idazoxan or dopamine ß-hydroxylase-saporin. Dopamine ß-hydroxylase-saporin also slowed recovery and enhanced spinal glial activation after partial spinal nerve ligation surgery. Ongoing activation of these pathways was critical to sustained recovery because intrathecal dopamine ß-hydroxylase-saporin given 7 weeks after recovery reinstituted hypersensitivity, while having no effect in animals without previous surgery. CONCLUSION: Collectively, these studies provide a clear back-translation from clinical observations of CPM and chronic postsurgical pain and suggest that the ability to engage ongoing descending endogenous noradrenergic signaling may be critical in determining time course of recovery from hypersensitivity after surgery.


Acute Pain/physiopathology , Acute Pain/therapy , Analgesia/methods , Pain, Postoperative/physiopathology , Pain, Postoperative/therapy , Acute Pain/etiology , Animals , Male , Pain, Postoperative/etiology , Predictive Value of Tests , Pyramidal Tracts/physiopathology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Time Factors
11.
J Neurophysiol ; 113(1): 100-9, 2015 Jan 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25274350

Chronic pain after nerve injury is often accompanied by hypersensitivity to mechanical stimuli, yet whether this reflects altered input, altered processing, or both remains unclear. Spinal nerve ligation or transection results in hypersensitivity to mechanical stimuli in skin innervated by adjacent dorsal root ganglia, but no previous study has quantified the changes in receptive field properties of these neurons in vivo. To address this, we recorded intracellularly from L4 dorsal root ganglion neurons of anesthetized young adult rats, 1 wk after L5 partial spinal nerve ligation (pSNL) or sham surgery. One week after pSNL, hindpaw mechanical withdrawal threshold in awake, freely behaving animals was decreased in the L4 distribution on the nerve-injured side compared with sham controls. Electrophysiology revealed that high-threshold mechanoreceptive cells of A-fiber conduction velocity in L4 were sensitized, with a seven-fold reduction in mechanical threshold, a seven-fold increase in receptive field area, and doubling of maximum instantaneous frequency in response to peripheral stimuli, accompanied by reductions in after-hyperpolarization amplitude and duration. Only a reduction in mechanical threshold (minimum von Frey hair producing neuronal activity) was observed in C-fiber conduction velocity high-threshold mechanoreceptive cells. In contrast, low-threshold mechanoreceptive cells were desensitized, with a 13-fold increase in mechanical threshold, a 60% reduction in receptive field area, and a 40% reduction in instantaneous frequency to stimulation. No spontaneous activity was observed in L4 ganglia, and the likelihood of recording from neurons without a mechanical receptive field was increased after pSNL. These data suggest massively altered input from undamaged sensory afferents innervating areas of hypersensitivity after nerve injury, with reduced tactile and increased nociceptive afferent response. These findings differ importantly from previous preclinical studies, but are consistent with clinical findings in most patients with chronic neuropathic pain.


Ganglia, Spinal/physiopathology , Mechanoreceptors/physiology , Nociceptors/physiology , Spinal Nerves/injuries , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Hindlimb/physiology , Lumbar Vertebrae , Mechanoreceptors/cytology , Membrane Potentials , Muscle Spindles/innervation , Neural Conduction , Nociceptors/cytology , Pain Threshold/physiology , Physical Stimulation , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Skin/physiopathology , Spinal Nerves/physiopathology , Touch
12.
Pain ; 155(10): 1935-42, 2014 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24837843

Chronic pain after peripheral nerve damage is often accompanied by a reduction in prefrontal cortex (PFC)-related cognitive functions, which are regulated by noradrenaline, released from efferents originating in the locus coeruleus (LC). L5 to L6 spinal nerve ligation (SNL) in rats increased tissue content and extracellular concentrations of noradrenaline in microdialysates from the PFC, and impaired attentional level in the novel object recognition test. Systemic gabapentin, commonly used to treat chronic pain, impaired the novel object recognition task in normal but not SNL animals. Accordingly, gabapentin increased c-fos expression in LC neurons and noradrenaline release in the PFC in normal animals, but in SNL animals, gabapentin failed to increase c-fos expression in LC neurons projecting to the PFC and failed to increase noradrenaline release in the PFC. In contrast, locally perfused gabapentin reduced noradrenaline release in the PFC in vivo and in PFC synaptosomes in vitro. SNL- and gabapentin-induced impairment of novel object recognition task were reversed by intraperitoneal injection of the α1-adrenoceptor antagonist prazosin. These results suggest that increase in noradrenergic tone, induced by nerve injury or gabapentin, impairs PFC functions possibly via α1-adrenoceptor-mediated mechanisms; that the net effect of gabapentin on noradrenaline release in the PFC would depend on sometimes opposing actions at different sites; and that nerve injury selectively impairs the response to gabapentin in PFC-projecting neurons in the LC.


Adrenergic Neurons/drug effects , Amines/pharmacology , Analgesics/pharmacology , Attention/drug effects , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Chronic Pain/psychology , Cyclohexanecarboxylic Acids/pharmacology , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/psychology , Prefrontal Cortex/metabolism , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/pharmacology , Adrenergic Neurons/metabolism , Animals , Attention/physiology , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Chronic Pain/etiology , Chronic Pain/metabolism , Gabapentin , Male , Microdialysis , Norepinephrine/metabolism , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/complications , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/metabolism , Prefrontal Cortex/drug effects , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Recognition, Psychology/drug effects , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Signal Transduction/physiology , Synaptosomes/drug effects , Synaptosomes/metabolism
13.
Neuropharmacology ; 81: 95-100, 2014 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24495399

Gabapentin has shown to be effective in animals and humans with acute postoperative and chronic pain. Yet the mechanisms by which gabapentin reduces pain have not been fully addressed. The current study performed in vivo microdialysis in the locus coeruleus (LC) in normal and spinal nerve ligated (SNL) rats to examine the effect of gabapentin on extracellular glutamate concentration and its mechanisms of action with focus on presynaptic GABA-B receptors, astroglial glutamate transporter-1 (GLT-1), and interactions with α2δ subunits of voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels and endogenous noradrenaline. Basal extracellular concentration and tissue content of glutamate in the LC were greater in SNL rats than normal ones. Intravenously administered and LC-perfused gabapentin increased extracellular glutamate concentration in the LC. The net amount of glutamate increased by gabapentin is larger in SNL rats compared with normal ones, although the percentage increases from the baseline did not differ. The gabapentin-related α2δ ligand pregabalin increased extracellular glutamate concentration in the LC, whereas another α2δ ligand, 3-exo-aminobicyclo [2.2.1] heptane-2-exo-carboxylic acid (ABHCA), did not. Selective blockade by the dihydrokainic acid or knock-down of GLT-1 by the small interfering RNA abolished the gabapentin-induced glutamate increase in the LC, whereas blockade of GABA-B receptors by the CGP-35348 and depletion of noradrenalin by the dopamine-ß-hydroxylase antibody conjugated to saporin did not. These results suggest that gabapentin induces glutamate release from astrocytes in the LC via GLT-1-dependent mechanisms to stimulate descending inhibition. The present study also demonstrates that this target of gabapentin in astrocytes does not require interaction with α2δ subunits in neurons.


Amines/pharmacology , Amino Acid Transport System X-AG/metabolism , Astrocytes/drug effects , Cyclohexanecarboxylic Acids/pharmacology , Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists/pharmacology , Locus Coeruleus/drug effects , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/pharmacology , Amines/therapeutic use , Amino Acid Transport System X-AG/antagonists & inhibitors , Animals , Cyclohexanecarboxylic Acids/therapeutic use , Disease Models, Animal , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists/therapeutic use , GABA Antagonists/pharmacology , Gabapentin , Male , Neuralgia/drug therapy , Neuralgia/etiology , Neuralgia/pathology , Norepinephrine/metabolism , Organophosphorus Compounds/pharmacology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Receptors, GABA-B/metabolism , Spinal Nerves/surgery , Time Factors , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/therapeutic use
15.
J Pain ; 14(11): 1485-91, 2013 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24021575

UNLABELLED: The present study examined whether the histone deacetylase inhibitor valproate prevents downregulation of glutamate transporters in the primary cultured astrocytes and in the spinal cord after L5-L6 spinal nerve ligation (SNL) and whether this action of valproate on spinal glutamate transporters prevents spinal glutamate dysregulation and development of hypersensitivity after SNL. In cultured astrocytes, valproate prevented downregulation of glutamate transporter-1 (GLT-1) and glutamate-aspartate transporter in a concentration-dependent manner. Repeated oral administration of valproate reduced the development of hypersensitivity and prevented the downregulation of spinal GLT-1 and glutamate-aspartate transporter expression in rats after SNL, but did not affect mechanical nociception and expression of those transporters in normal rats. Valproate's effects on hypersensitivity and spinal GLT-1 expression in SNL rats were blocked by intrathecal administration of the selective GLT-1 blocker dihydrokainic acid or the GLT-1 selective small interfering RNA (siRNA). Extracellular glutamate concentration in the spinal cord, measured by microdialysis, was increased in animals with SNL or after GLT-1 selective siRNA treatment, and valproate prevented the SNL-induced glutamate increase. These results suggest that valproate reduces the development of chronic pain after nerve injury in part by preventing downregulation of glutamate transporters, especially GLT-1, to maintain normal extracellular glutamate concentrations in the spinal cord. PERSPECTIVE: This study demonstrates that valproate prevents the downregulation of glutamate transporters in the spinal cord, which contributes in part to the development of chronic pain after nerve injury. Given clinical availability and established safety profiles, perioperative use of valproate should be tested to prevent chronic pain after surgery.


Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Hyperalgesia/drug therapy , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/complications , Valproic Acid/therapeutic use , Amino Acid Transport System X-AG/metabolism , Animals , Astrocytes/drug effects , Astrocytes/metabolism , Down-Regulation/drug effects , Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter 2/metabolism , Hyperalgesia/etiology , Hyperalgesia/metabolism , Male , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Spinal Cord/drug effects , Spinal Cord/metabolism , Valproic Acid/pharmacology
16.
Anesthesiology ; 118(1): 173-80, 2013 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23221863

BACKGROUND: Evoking spinal release of acetylcholine (ACh) produces antinociception in normal animals and reduces hypersensitivity after nerve injury, and some studies suggest that ACh-mediated analgesia relies on γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-ergic signaling in the spinal cord. In this study, the authors tested the spinal mechanisms underlying the antihypersensitivity effects of donepezil, a central nervous system-penetrating cholinesterase inhibitor, in a rat model of neuropathic pain. METHODS: Male Sprague-Dawley rats were anesthetized, and L5 spinal nerve ligation was performed unilaterally. Withdrawal threshold to a paw pressure test was measured before and after intraperitoneal administration of donepezil, with or without intrathecal antagonists for cholinergic and GABAergic receptors. Microdialysis studies in the ipsilateral dorsal horn of the lumbar spinal cord were also performed to measure extracellular ACh and GABA. RESULTS: Donepezil increased the withdrawal threshold in spinal nerve ligation rats but not in normal rats. The antihypersensitivity effect of donepezil (1 mg/kg) in spinal nerve ligation rats was reduced by intrathecal pretreatment with atropine (30 µg), a muscarinic receptor antagonist; mecamylamine (100 µg), a nicotinic receptor antagonist; bicuculline (0.03 µg), a γ-aminobutyric acid receptor type A antagonist; and CGP 35348 (30 µg), a γ-aminobutyric acid receptor type B antagonist. ACh and GABA concentrations in the microdialysates from the spinal dorsal horn were increased after intraperitoneal donepezil treatment (1 mg/kg) in both normal and spinal nerve ligation rats. CONCLUSIONS: Systemic administration of donepezil reduces hypersensitivity after nerve injury by increasing extracellular ACh concentration, which itself induces GABA release in the spinal cord. Activation of this spinal cholinergic-GABAergic interaction represents a promising treatment for neuropathic pain.


Cholinergic Agents/blood , Cholinesterase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Indans/pharmacology , Neuralgia/drug therapy , Peripheral Nerve Injuries , Piperidines/pharmacology , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/blood , Animals , Atropine/pharmacology , Bicuculline/pharmacology , Cholinergic Agents/pharmacology , Disease Models, Animal , Donepezil , GABA Agents/blood , GABA Agents/pharmacology , GABA Antagonists/pharmacology , GABA-A Receptor Antagonists/pharmacology , Male , Mecamylamine/pharmacology , Nicotinic Antagonists/pharmacology , Organophosphorus Compounds/pharmacology , Parasympatholytics/pharmacology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Spinal Nerves/drug effects , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/pharmacology
17.
Anesthesiology ; 118(1): 152-9, 2013 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23249932

BACKGROUND: Physical injury, including surgery, can result in chronic pain; yet chronic pain following childbirth, including cesarean delivery in women, is rare. The mechanisms involved in this protection by pregnancy or delivery have not been explored. METHODS: We examined the effect of pregnancy and delivery on hypersensitivity to mechanical stimuli of the rat hindpaw induced by peripheral nerve injury (spinal nerve ligation) and after intrathecal oxytocin, atosiban, and naloxone. Additionally, oxytocin concentration in lumbar spinal cerebrospinal fluid was determined. RESULTS: Spinal nerve ligation performed at mid-pregnancy resulted in similar hypersensitivity to nonpregnant controls, but hypersensitivity partially resolved beginning after delivery. Removal of pups after delivery prevented this partial resolution. Cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of oxytocin were greater in normal postpartum rats prior to weaning. To examine the effect of injury at the time of delivery rather than during pregnancy, spinal nerve ligation was performed within 24 h of delivery. This resulted in acute hypersensitivity that partially resolved over the next 2-3 weeks. Weaning of pups resulted only in a temporary return of hypersensitivity. Intrathecal oxytocin effectively reversed the hypersensitivity following separation of the pups. Postpartum resolution of hypersensitivity was transiently abolished by intrathecal injection of the oxytocin receptor antagonist, atosiban. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that the postpartum period rather than pregnancy protects against chronic hypersensitivity from peripheral nerve injury and that this protection may reflect sustained oxytocin signaling in the central nervous system during this period.


Hypersensitivity/etiology , Hypersensitivity/prevention & control , Oxytocics/pharmacology , Oxytocin/pharmacology , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/complications , Animals , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Hormone Antagonists/administration & dosage , Hypersensitivity/cerebrospinal fluid , Injections, Spinal , Naloxone/administration & dosage , Narcotic Antagonists/administration & dosage , Oxytocics/cerebrospinal fluid , Oxytocin/cerebrospinal fluid , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/cerebrospinal fluid , Physical Stimulation , Postpartum Period , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Spinal Nerves/drug effects , Vasotocin/administration & dosage , Vasotocin/analogs & derivatives , Weaning
18.
Anesthesiology ; 117(2): 389-98, 2012 Aug.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22722575

INTRODUCTION: Monoaminergic pathways, impinging an α2-adrenoceptors and 5-HT3 serotonin receptors, modulate nociceptive transmission, but their mechanisms and interactions after neuropathic injury are unknown. Here we examine these interactions in rodents after nerve injury. METHODS: Male Sprague-Dawley rats following L5-L6 spinal nerve ligation (SNL) were used for either behavioral testing, in vivo microdialysis for γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and acetylcholine release, or synaptosome preparation for GABA release. RESULTS: Intrathecal administration of the α2-adrenoceptor agonist (clonidine) and 5-HT3 receptor agonist (chlorophenylbiguanide) reduced hypersensitivity in SNL rats via GABA receptor-mediated mechanisms. Clonidine increased GABA and acetylcholine release in vivo in the spinal cord of SNL rats but not in normal rats. Clonidine-induced spinal GABA release in SNL rats was blocked by α2-adrenergic and nicotinic cholinergic antagonists. The 5-HT3 receptor antagonist ondansetron decreased and chlorophenylbiguanide increased spinal GABA release in both normal and SNL rats. In synaptosomes from the spinal dorsal horn of SNL rats, presynaptic GABA release was increased by nicotinic agonists and decreased by muscarinic and α2-adrenergic agonists. Spinally administered ondansetron significantly reduced clonidine-induced antihypersensitivity and spinal GABA release in SNL rats. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that spinal GABA contributes to antihypersensitivity from intrathecal α2-adrenergic and 5-HT3 receptor agonists in the neuropathic pain state, that cholinergic neuroplasticity after nerve injury is critical for α2-adrenoceptor-mediated GABA release, and that blockade of spinal 5-HT3 receptors reduces α2-adrenoceptor-mediated antihypersensitivity via reducing total GABA release.


Clonidine/pharmacology , Ondansetron/pharmacology , Peripheral Nerve Injuries , Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2/drug effects , Receptors, Serotonin, 5-HT3/drug effects , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/pharmacology , Adrenergic alpha-2 Receptor Agonists/pharmacology , Analgesia/methods , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Male , Pain/drug therapy , Pain Management/methods , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Serotonin Antagonists/pharmacology
19.
Anesthesiology ; 116(6): 1347-53, 2012 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22487864

BACKGROUND: Gabapentin reduces acute postoperative and chronic neuropathic pain, but its sites and mechanisms of action are unclear. Based on previous electrophysiologic studies, the authors tested whether gabapentin reduced γ-amino butyric acid (GABA) release in the locus coeruleus (LC), a major site of descending inhibition, rather than in the spinal cord. METHODS: Male Sprague-Dawley rats with or without L5-L6 spinal nerve ligation (SNL) were used. Immunostaining for glutamic acid decarboxylase and GABA release in synaptosomes and microdialysates were examined in the LC and spinal dorsal horn. RESULTS: Basal GABA release and expression of glutamic acid decarboxylase increased in the LC but decreased in the spinal dorsal horn after SNL. In microdialysates from the LC, intravenously administered gabapentin decreased extracellular GABA concentration in normal and SNL rats. In synaptosomes prepared from the LC, gabapentin and other α2δ ligands inhibited KCl-evoked GABA release in normal and SNL rats. In microdialysates from the spinal dorsal horn, intravenous gabapentin did not alter GABA concentrations in normal rats but slightly increased them in SNL rats. In synaptosomes from the spinal dorsal horn, neither gabapentin nor other α2δ ligands affected KCl-evoked GABA release in normal and SNL rats. DISCUSSION: These results suggest that peripheral nerve injury induces plasticity of GABAergic neurons differently in the LC and spinal dorsal horn and that gabapentin reduces presynaptic GABA release in the LC but not in the spinal dorsal horn. The current study supports the idea that gabapentin activates descending noradrenergic inhibition via disinhibition of LC neurons.


Amines/pharmacology , Cyclohexanecarboxylic Acids/pharmacology , Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists/pharmacology , Locus Coeruleus/metabolism , Peripheral Nerve Injuries/metabolism , Posterior Horn Cells/metabolism , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/metabolism , Animals , Extracellular Space/drug effects , Extracellular Space/metabolism , Gabapentin , Glutamate Decarboxylase/metabolism , Immunohistochemistry , Ligation , Locus Coeruleus/drug effects , Male , Microdialysis , Posterior Horn Cells/drug effects , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Spinal Nerves/injuries , Synaptosomes/drug effects , Synaptosomes/metabolism , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/pharmacology
20.
Eur J Pharmacol ; 677(1-3): 87-92, 2012 Feb 29.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22206816

We have recently demonstrated that the glutamate transporter activator riluzole paradoxically enhanced glutamate-induced glutamate release from cultured astrocytes. We further showed that both riluzole and the α(2)δ subunit ligand gabapentin activated descending inhibition in rats by increasing glutamate receptor signaling in the locus coeruleus and hypothesized that these drugs share common mechanisms to enhance glutamate release from astrocytes. In the present study, we examined the effects of riluzole and gabapentin on glutamate uptake and release and glutamate-induced Ca(2+) responses in primary cultures of astrocytes. Riluzole and gabapentin facilitated glutamate-induced glutamate release from astrocytes and significantly increased glutamate uptake, the latter being completely blocked by the non-selective glutamate transporter blocker DL-threo-ß-benzyloxyaspartic acid (DL-TBOA). Riluzole and gabapentin also enhanced the glutamate-induced increase in intracellular Ca(2+) concentrations. Some α(2)δ subunit ligands, pregabalin and L-isoleucine, enhanced the glutamate-induced Ca(2+) response, whereas another, 3-exo-aminobicyclo[2.2.1]heptane-2-exo-carboxylic acid (ABHCA), did not. The enhancement of glutamate-induced intracellular Ca(2+) response by riluzole and gabapentin was blocked by the DL-TBOA and an inhibitor of Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange, 2-[2-[4-(4-nitrobenzyloxy)phenyl]ethyl]isothiurea (KB-R7943). Gabapentin's enhancement of Ca(2+) increase was specific to glutamate stimulation, as it was not mimicked with stimulation by ATP. These results suggest that riluzole and gabapentin enhance Na(+)-glutamate co-transport through glutamate transporters, induce subsequent Ca(2+) influx via the reverse mode of Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange, and thereby facilitate Ca(2+)-dependent glutamate release by glutamate in astrocytes. The present study also demonstrates a novel target of gabapentinoid action in astrocytes other than α(2)δ subunits in neurons.


Amines/pharmacology , Amino Acid Transport System X-AG/metabolism , Astrocytes/drug effects , Astrocytes/metabolism , Cyclohexanecarboxylic Acids/pharmacology , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Glutamic Acid/pharmacology , Riluzole/pharmacology , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/pharmacology , Amines/metabolism , Animals , Astrocytes/cytology , Biological Transport/drug effects , Calcium/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Cyclohexanecarboxylic Acids/metabolism , Gabapentin , Intracellular Space/drug effects , Intracellular Space/metabolism , Ligands , Protein Subunits/metabolism , Rats , Riluzole/metabolism , Sodium/metabolism , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/metabolism
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