Schäfer M, Mousa S A, Stein C
Behavioral Pharmacology and Genetics Section, National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA.
Eur J Pharmacol. 1997 Mar 26;323(1):1-10. doi: 10.1016/s0014-2999(97)00057-5.
Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) plays a major role at the level of the hypothalamus and pituitary to control the body's response mechanisms to stressful stimuli. The recent discovery of CRF outside the central nervous system suggests that CRF may well play a similar role in peripheral tissues, most likely in a paracrine manner. While its effects in many other peripheral tissues is not known yet, CRF and its receptors are upregulated in inflammatory pain states pointing to a key role under these circumstances. Indeed, locally expressed CRF seems to act on CRF receptors on immune cells which have migrated into the area of the inflamed tissue, and induce the release of opioid peptides synthesized within these immune cells. These opioids subsequently act on peripheral opioid receptors located on peripheral sensory nerves to inhibit the transmission of painful stimuli. CRF may also affect the inflammatory response; however, these data are still controversial. The peripheral paracrine effects of CRF may be similar to those of hypothalamic CRF, i.e., to counterbalance local stressful events, such as inflammation and pain, so that they do not threaten the homeostasis of the body. Interestingly, CRF-like peptides have been identified not only in mammalians, but also in species such as the frog (Stenzel-Poore et al., 1992, Mol. Endocrinol. 6, 1716) and the teleost fish (Okawara et al., 1988, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85, 8439) indicating that this is a peptide that has been conserved over a long period (200 million years) across species (Lederis et al., 1990, Prog. Clin. Biol. Res. 342, 467) and that the release of ACTH-like peptides by peptides of the CRF family may represent an ancestral type of stress response (Ottaviani et al., 1992, Gen. Comp. Endocrinol. 87, 354; Tran et al., 1990, Gen. Comp. Endocrinol. 78, 351).
促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子(CRF)在下丘脑和垂体水平发挥主要作用,以控制机体对应激刺激的反应机制。最近在中枢神经系统之外发现CRF,这表明CRF很可能在外周组织中以旁分泌方式发挥类似作用。虽然其在许多其他外周组织中的作用尚不清楚,但在炎性疼痛状态下,CRF及其受体上调,表明在这些情况下其起关键作用。实际上,局部表达的CRF似乎作用于迁移至炎症组织区域的免疫细胞上的CRF受体,并诱导这些免疫细胞内合成的阿片肽释放。这些阿片类物质随后作用于位于外周感觉神经上的外周阿片受体,以抑制疼痛刺激的传递。CRF也可能影响炎症反应;然而,这些数据仍存在争议。CRF的外周旁分泌作用可能类似于下丘脑CRF的作用,即抵消局部应激事件,如炎症和疼痛,从而使其不威胁机体的稳态。有趣的是,不仅在哺乳动物中,而且在青蛙(Stenzel-Poore等人,1992年,《分子内分泌学》6,1716)和硬骨鱼(Okawara等人,1988年,《美国国家科学院院刊》85,8439)等物种中也鉴定出了CRF样肽,这表明这是一种在很长一段时间(2亿年)内跨物种保守的肽(Lederis等人,1990年,《临床生物学研究进展》342,467),并且CRF家族肽释放促肾上腺皮质激素样肽可能代表一种原始的应激反应类型(Ottaviani等人,1992年,《普通比较内分泌学》87,354;Tran等人,1990年,《普通比较内分泌学》78,351)。