Sachin Goyal, Nesia Zurek, Reza Ehsanian, Shivali Goyal, David T Jones, Mark W Shilling, Gary Desir, Fred Gorelick, Karin N Westlund, Sascha Ra Alles
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Cerulein is an orthologue of cholecystokinin, which is often used to induce acute pancreatitis in pre-clinical studies. In these models, animals show signs of pain, and this is the most common complaint of patients with acute pancreatitis. However, little is known about how this pain is mediated, the role of cerulein murine pain responses, or its relevance to human pancreatitis pain. We injected 25 or 50 µg/kg cerulein intraperitoneally into male and female mice and assessed pain behaviors using the von Frey test of mechanical hypersensitivity. The excitability of mouse and human visceral DRG neurons was assessed using whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology. Pharmacology was performed using commercial antagonists of cholecystokinin A or B receptors. We show that pain behaviors developed similarly in male and female cerulein-injected mice and that visceral DRG from these mice exhibited increased excitability compared to controls. Direct application of cerulein to T8-L2 mouse and human DRG showed increased excitability compared to controls consistent with DRG from cerulein-injected mice. The actions of cerulein on visceral DRG neurons were attributed to CCKA, but not CCKB receptor. A similar DRG response to cerulein was observed in a human DRG. These findings highlight the importance of the cholecystokinin system, particularly the CCK-A receptor, to visceral pain including pancreatitis through direct sensitization of visceral dorsal root ganglia neurons from mice or humans.
期刊介绍:
Molecular Pain is a peer-reviewed, open access journal that considers manuscripts in pain research at the cellular, subcellular and molecular levels. Molecular Pain provides a forum for molecular pain scientists to communicate their research findings in a targeted manner to others in this important and growing field.