Yang Dongni, Gereau Robert W
Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA Division of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Pain. 2003 Dec;106(3):411-417. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2003.08.011.
We previously demonstrated that activation of peripheral group II mGluRs inhibits PGE2-induced thermal hyperalgesia. In the present study we examined the role of peripheral group II mGluRs in inflammation-induced mechanical allodynia in CD1 mice. Subcutaneous injection of group II mGluR agonists or antagonists into the plantar surface of the mouse hind paw did not alter mechanical thresholds, suggesting that peripheral group II mGluRs did not modulate basal mechanical sensation. We then used either PGE2 or carrageenan to induce mechanical allodynia and investigated the effects of activating or inhibiting peripheral group II mGluRs. PGE2-injected mice showed an 87+/-1% decrease of mechanical thresholds 75 min after the injection, whereas mice injected with group II mGluR agonists had no increase in sensitivity compared to vehicle-injected mice. In the carrageenan-induced inflammation model, 3 h after carrageenan injection the mechanical thresholds of mice injected with group II mGluR agonist APDC fully recovered to baseline levels while vehicle-injected mice showed only 43+/-8% recovery. The application of group II mGluR antagonist (LY341495) alone delayed the recovery of PGE2- and carrageenan-induced mechanical allodynia. Three hours after injection of carrageenan, LY341495-injected mice showed little or no recovery with mechanical thresholds 8+/-1% of pre-carrageenan baselines, compared to 57+/-8% of pre-carrageenan baselines in vehicle-injected mice at the same time point. Our results suggest that activation of peripheral group II mGluRs reduces inflammation-induced mechanical allodynia and that peripheral group II mGluRs may mediate endogenous anti-allodynia effects, which speed recovery from inflammation-induced hypersensitivity.
我们之前证明,外周II组代谢型谷氨酸受体(mGluRs)的激活可抑制前列腺素E2(PGE2)诱导的热痛觉过敏。在本研究中,我们检测了外周II组mGluRs在CD1小鼠炎症诱导的机械性异常性疼痛中的作用。将II组mGluR激动剂或拮抗剂皮下注射到小鼠后爪足底表面,并未改变机械阈值,这表明外周II组mGluRs并不调节基础机械感觉。然后,我们使用PGE2或角叉菜胶诱导机械性异常性疼痛,并研究激活或抑制外周II组mGluRs的作用。注射PGE2的小鼠在注射后75分钟时机械阈值降低了87±1%,而注射II组mGluR激动剂的小鼠与注射赋形剂的小鼠相比,敏感性并未增加。在角叉菜胶诱导的炎症模型中,注射角叉菜胶后3小时,注射II组mGluR激动剂APDC的小鼠的机械阈值完全恢复到基线水平,而注射赋形剂的小鼠仅恢复了43±8%。单独应用II组mGluR拮抗剂(LY341495)可延迟PGE2和角叉菜胶诱导的机械性异常性疼痛的恢复。注射角叉菜胶3小时后,注射LY341495的小鼠几乎没有恢复,机械阈值为角叉菜胶注射前基线的8±1%,而在同一时间点,注射赋形剂的小鼠的机械阈值为角叉菜胶注射前基线的57±8%。我们的结果表明,外周II组mGluRs的激活可减轻炎症诱导的机械性异常性疼痛,并且外周II组mGluRs可能介导内源性抗异常性疼痛作用,从而加速从炎症诱导的超敏反应中恢复。