McDowell T S
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Wisconsin Medical School, B6/319 Clinical Science Center, 600 Highland Avenue, Madison, WI 53792-3272, USA.
Neuroscience. 2004;125(4):1029-37. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2004.03.009.
Nerve growth factor (NGF) promotes the survival of embryonic sensory neurons and maintains the phenotypic characteristics of primary nociceptive neurons postnatally. NGF also contributes to nociceptor activation and hyperalgesia during inflammatory pain states. The purpose of this study was to determine whether NGF might have an additional pronociceptive action by interfering with opioid-mediated analgesia in primary nociceptive neurons. Sensory neurons were isolated from the dorsal root ganglia of weanling rats and kept in standard culture conditions either with or without exogenous NGF (50 ng/ml). Currents through voltage-gated calcium channels were recorded from individual neurons using the whole cell patch clamp technique with Ba(2+) as the charge carrier (I(Ba)). The micro-opioid agonist fentanyl (1 microM) and the GABA(B) agonist baclofen (50 microM) were used to test G protein-dependent inhibition of I(Ba). Fentanyl inhibited I(Ba) by an average of 38+/-4% in untreated cells vs. 25+/-2% in NGF-treated cells (P<0.01). NGF had no effect on I(Ba) current magnitude or kinetics. The NGF-induced attenuation of opioid action was observed as early as 4 h after exposure, but was not seen when NGF was applied by bath perfusion for up to 40 min, suggesting that the effect was not mediated by a rapid phosphorylation event. The effect of NGF was prevented by K-252a (100 nM), an inhibitor of TrkA autophosphorylation. Baclofen-induced inhibition of I(Ba), on the other hand, was not affected by NGF treatment, suggesting that NGF modulation of opioid-mediated inhibition occurred upstream from the G protein. This was supported by the finding that GTP-gamma-S, an agonist independent G protein activator, inhibited I(Ba) similarly in both untreated and NGF treated cells. The results show that NGF selectively attenuated opioid-mediated inhibition of I(Ba) via TrkA receptor activation, possibly by altering opioid receptor function.
神经生长因子(NGF)可促进胚胎感觉神经元的存活,并在出生后维持初级伤害性感受神经元的表型特征。NGF还在炎症性疼痛状态下促成伤害感受器的激活和痛觉过敏。本研究的目的是确定NGF是否可能通过干扰初级伤害性感受神经元中阿片类药物介导的镇痛作用而具有额外的促伤害感受作用。从断奶大鼠的背根神经节中分离出感觉神经元,并在有或没有外源性NGF(50 ng/ml)的标准培养条件下培养。使用以Ba(2+)作为电荷载体的全细胞膜片钳技术(I(Ba))从单个神经元记录通过电压门控钙通道的电流。使用微阿片类激动剂芬太尼(1 microM)和GABA(B)激动剂巴氯芬(50 microM)来测试G蛋白依赖性对I(Ba)的抑制作用。在未处理的细胞中,芬太尼平均抑制I(Ba) 38±4%,而在NGF处理的细胞中为25±2%(P<0.01)。NGF对I(Ba)电流幅度或动力学没有影响。NGF诱导的阿片类药物作用减弱最早在暴露后4小时观察到,但当通过浴灌流应用NGF长达40分钟时未观察到,这表明该作用不是由快速磷酸化事件介导的。NGF的作用被TrkA自磷酸化抑制剂K-252a(100 nM)所阻断。另一方面,巴氯芬诱导的I(Ba)抑制不受NGF处理的影响,这表明NGF对阿片类药物介导的抑制的调节发生在G蛋白的上游。这一发现得到了以下支持:GTP-γ-S,一种独立于激动剂的G蛋白激活剂,在未处理和NGF处理的细胞中对I(Ba)的抑制作用相似。结果表明,NGF通过TrkA受体激活选择性地减弱阿片类药物介导的I(Ba)抑制,可能是通过改变阿片受体功能。