Department of Cell Biology, Neurobiology and Anatomy, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI 53226, USA.
Curr Pharm Biotechnol. 2011 Oct;12(10):1689-97. doi: 10.2174/138920111798357302.
Acute pain detection is vital to navigate and survive in one's environment. Protection and preservation occur because primary afferent nociceptors transduce adverse environmental stimuli into electrical impulses that are transmitted to and interpreted within high levels of the central nervous system. Therefore, it is critical that the molecular mechanisms that convert noxious information into neural signals be identified, and their specific functional roles delineated in both acute and chronic pain settings. The Transient Receptor Potential (TRP) channel family member TRP ankyrin 1 (TRPA1) is an excellent candidate molecule to explore and intricately understand how single channel properties can tailor behavioral nociceptive responses. TRPA1 appears to dynamically respond to an amazingly wide range of diverse stimuli that include apparently unrelated modalities such as mechanical, chemical and thermal stimuli that activate somatosensory neurons. How such dissimilar stimuli activate TRPA1, yet result in modality-specific signals to the CNS is unclear. Furthermore, TRPA1 is also involved in persistent to chronic painful states such as inflammation, neuropathic pain, diabetes, fibromyalgia, bronchitis and emphysema. Yet how TRPA1's role changes from an acute sensor of physical stimuli to its contribution to these diseases that are concomitant with implacable, chronic pain is unknown. TRPA1's involvement in the nociceptive machinery that relays the adverse stimuli during painful disease states is of considerable interest for drug delivery and design by many pharmaceutical entities. In this review, we will assess the current knowledge base of TRPA1 in acute nociception and persistent inflammatory pain states, and explore its potential as a therapeutic pharmacological target in chronic pervasive conditions such neuropathic pain, persistent inflammation and diabetes.
急性疼痛的检测对于在环境中导航和生存至关重要。保护和保存的发生是因为初级传入伤害感受器将不利的环境刺激转化为电脉冲,这些电脉冲被传输并在中枢神经系统的高级水平上进行解释。因此,确定将有害信息转化为神经信号的分子机制,并在急性和慢性疼痛环境中阐明其特定的功能作用至关重要。瞬时受体电位 (TRP) 通道家族成员 TRP 锚蛋白 1 (TRPA1) 是一个很好的候选分子,可以深入了解单个通道特性如何调整行为性疼痛反应。TRPA1 似乎对各种不同的刺激动态响应,包括机械、化学和热刺激等显然不相关的模态,这些刺激激活体感觉神经元。如此不同的刺激如何激活 TRPA1,却导致向中枢神经系统传递模态特异性信号尚不清楚。此外,TRPA1 还参与持续性至慢性疼痛状态,如炎症、神经病理性疼痛、糖尿病、纤维肌痛、支气管炎和肺气肿。然而,TRPA1 的作用从急性物理刺激传感器如何转变为其对这些与不可避免的慢性疼痛相伴的疾病的贡献尚不清楚。TRPA1 在传递疼痛疾病状态下有害刺激的伤害性机械中的作用对于许多制药实体的药物输送和设计具有相当大的兴趣。在这篇综述中,我们将评估 TRPA1 在急性疼痛和持续性炎症性疼痛状态下的当前知识库,并探讨其作为神经病理性疼痛、持续性炎症和糖尿病等慢性弥漫性疾病的治疗药理学靶点的潜力。