Zambelli Vanessa O, Gross Eric R, Chen Che-Hong, Gutierrez Vanessa P, Cury Yara, Mochly-Rosen Daria
Department of Chemical and Systems Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. Laboratory of Pain and Signaling, Butantan Institute, São Paulo 05503-900, Brazil.
Department of Chemical and Systems Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative, and Pain Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Sci Transl Med. 2014 Aug 27;6(251):251ra118. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3009539.
Exogenous aldehydes can cause pain in animal models, suggesting that aldehyde dehydrogenase-2 (ALDH2), which metabolizes many aldehydes, may regulate nociception. To test this hypothesis, we generated a knock-in mouse with an inactivating point mutation in ALDH2 (ALDH22), which is also present in human ALDH2 of ~540 million East Asians. The ALDH21/2 heterozygotic mice exhibited a larger response to painful stimuli than their wild-type littermates, and this heightened nociception was inhibited by an ALDH2-selective activator (Alda-1). No effect on inflammation per se was observed. Using a rat model, we then showed that nociception tightly correlated with ALDH activity (R(2) = 0.90) and that reduced nociception was associated with less early growth response protein 1 (EGR1) in the spinal cord and less reactive aldehyde accumulation at the insult site (including acetaldehyde and 4-hydroxynonenal). Further, acetaldehyde- and formalin-induced nociceptive behavior was greater in the ALDH21/*2 mice than in the wild-type mice. Finally, Alda-1 treatment was even beneficial when given after the inflammatory agent was administered. Our data in rodent models suggest that the mitochondrial enzyme ALDH2 regulates nociception and could serve as a molecular target for pain control, with ALDH2 activators, such as Alda-1, as potential non-narcotic, cardiac-safe analgesics. Furthermore, our results suggest a possible genetic basis for East Asians' apparent lower pain tolerance.
外源性醛类在动物模型中可引发疼痛,这表明代谢多种醛类的乙醛脱氢酶2(ALDH2)可能参与伤害性感受的调控。为验证这一假说,我们构建了一种ALDH2基因存在失活点突变的敲入小鼠(ALDH22),约5.4亿东亚人的人类ALDH2中也存在该突变。与野生型同窝小鼠相比,ALDH21/2杂合小鼠对疼痛刺激的反应更大,而这种增强的伤害性感受可被ALDH2选择性激活剂(Alda-1)抑制。未观察到对炎症本身有影响。随后,我们在大鼠模型中发现,伤害性感受与ALDH活性密切相关(R² = 0.90),伤害性感受降低与脊髓中早期生长反应蛋白1(EGR1)减少以及损伤部位(包括乙醛和4-羟基壬烯醛)活性醛类积累减少有关。此外,乙醛和福尔马林诱导的伤害性行为在ALDH21/*2小鼠中比野生型小鼠更强烈。最后,在给予炎症因子后再给予Alda-1治疗甚至有益。我们在啮齿动物模型中的数据表明,线粒体酶ALDH2参与伤害性感受的调控,可作为疼痛控制的分子靶点,而Alda-1等ALDH2激活剂可能是潜在的非麻醉性、心脏安全的镇痛药。此外,我们的结果提示了东亚人明显较低的疼痛耐受性可能存在的遗传基础。