伤害
医学
类阿片
痛觉过敏
δ-阿片受体
神经病理性疼痛
痛觉超敏
坐骨神经
慢性疼痛
止痛药
麻醉
受体
药理学
神经科学
内科学
生物
精神科
作者
Claire Gavériaux‐Ruff,Chihiro Nozaki,Xavier Nadal,Xavier C. Hever,Raphaël Weibel,Audrey Matifas,David J. Reiss,Dominique Filliol,Mohammed A. Nassar,John N. Wood,Rafaël Maldonado,Brigitte L. Kieffer
出处
期刊:Pain
[Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer)]
日期:2011-06-01
卷期号:152 (6): 1238-1248
被引量:148
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.pain.2010.12.031
摘要
Opioid receptors are major actors in pain control and are broadly distributed throughout the nervous system. A major challenge in pain research is the identification of key opioid receptor populations within nociceptive pathways, which control physiological and pathological pain. In particular, the respective contribution of peripheral vs. central receptors remains unclear, and it has not been addressed by genetic approaches. To investigate the contribution of peripheral delta opioid receptors in pain control, we created conditional knockout mice where delta receptors are deleted specifically in peripheral NaV1.8-positive primary nociceptive neurons. Mutant mice showed normal pain responses to acute heat and to mechanical and formalin stimuli. In contrast, mutant animals showed a remarkable increase of mechanical allodynia under both inflammatory pain induced by complete Freund adjuvant and neuropathic pain induced by partial sciatic nerve ligation. In these 2 models, heat hyperalgesia was virtually unchanged. SNC80, a delta agonist administered either systemically (complete Freund adjuvant and sciatic nerve ligation) or into a paw (sciatic nerve ligation), reduced thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia in control mice. However, these analgesic effects were absent in conditional mutant mice. In conclusion, this study reveals the existence of delta opioid receptor-mediated mechanisms, which operate at the level of NaV1.8-positive nociceptive neurons. Delta receptors in these neurons tonically inhibit mechanical hypersensitivity in both inflammatory and neuropathic pain, and they are essential to mediate delta opioid analgesia under conditions of persistent pain. This delta receptor population represents a feasible therapeutic target to alleviate chronic pain while avoiding adverse central effects. The conditional knockout of delta-opioid receptor in primary afferent NaV1.8 neurons augmented mechanical allodynia in persistent pain models and abolished delta opioid analgesia in these models.
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