Li X, Clark J D
Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System (VAPAHCS) and Stanford University Department of Anesthesiology, 112A, 3801 Miranda Avenue, Palo Alto, CA 94304, USA.
Neuroscience. 2001;105(4):949-56. doi: 10.1016/s0306-4522(01)00207-x.
Recent work from our laboratory and others supports a role for heme oxygenase in nociception and pain of several etiologies including inflammatory, incisional and neuropathic. Since it has been observed that heme oxygenase inhibitors reduce formalin-induced pain behaviors in mice and rats, we attempted to determine if this analgesic effect was reflected in a reduction in formalin-induced spinal cord Fos expression, an index of neuronal activation. To perform these studies, it was necessary to first examine the cytoarchitecture of the mouse lumbar spinal cord so that histological sections from known segmental levels could be chosen, and Fos-positive nuclei could be assigned to established dorsal horn laminae. After documenting the segmental and laminar distribution of Fos-positive nuclei following a 5% formalin injection, we went on to determine that the heme oxygenase inhibitor tin-protoporphyrin or morphine reduced this Fos expression as analyzed using confocal fluorescence microscopy. It was also observed that mice lacking expression of heme oxygenase type 2, an isozyme of heme oxygenase found in high abundance in the spinal cord, had lowered Fos expression after the formalin injection. Additional confocal microscopy studies demonstrated widespread expression of heme oxygenase type 2 in spinal cord neuron cell bodies. Double-labeling experiments showed that a high percentage of Fos-positive nuclei identified after administration of formalin were located within heme oxygenase type 2-positive cell profiles. Our studies support the hypothesis that heme oxygenase type 2 plays a role in formalin-induced nociception. Furthermore, from these results we suggest that the heme oxygenase type 2 located in spinal cord dorsal horn neurons participates in this nociceptive pathway.
我们实验室及其他机构最近的研究工作支持血红素加氧酶在多种病因引起的伤害感受和疼痛中发挥作用,这些病因包括炎症性、切口性和神经性疼痛。由于已经观察到血红素加氧酶抑制剂可减少小鼠和大鼠福尔马林诱导的疼痛行为,我们试图确定这种镇痛作用是否反映在福尔马林诱导的脊髓Fos表达减少上,Fos表达是神经元激活的一个指标。为了进行这些研究,首先有必要检查小鼠腰段脊髓的细胞结构,以便能够选择已知节段水平的组织学切片,并将Fos阳性核分配到既定的背角板层。在记录5%福尔马林注射后Fos阳性核的节段和板层分布后,我们接着确定,使用共聚焦荧光显微镜分析发现,血红素加氧酶抑制剂锡原卟啉或吗啡可减少这种Fos表达。还观察到,缺乏血红素加氧酶2型(在脊髓中大量存在的血红素加氧酶同工酶)表达的小鼠在福尔马林注射后Fos表达降低。额外的共聚焦显微镜研究表明,血红素加氧酶2型在脊髓神经元细胞体中广泛表达。双重标记实验表明,福尔马林给药后鉴定出的高比例Fos阳性核位于血红素加氧酶2型阳性细胞轮廓内。我们的研究支持这样一种假设,即血红素加氧酶2型在福尔马林诱导的伤害感受中发挥作用。此外,从这些结果我们推测,位于脊髓背角神经元中的血红素加氧酶2型参与了这条伤害感受通路。