Abstract
Peripheral nerve injury induces upregulation of the calcium channel α2δ-1 structural subunit in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and dorsal spinal cord of spinal nerve-ligated rats with neuropathic pain, suggesting a role of the calcium channel α2δ-1 subunit in central sensitization. To investigate whether spinal dorsal horn α2δ-1 subunit upregulation derives from increased DRG α2δ-1 subunit and plays a causal role in neuropathic pain development, we examined spinal dorsal horn α2δ-1 subunit expression with or without dorsal rhizotomy in spinal nerve-ligated rats and its correlation with tactile allodynia, a neuropathic pain state defined as reduced thresholds to non-noxious tactile stimulation. We also examined the effects of intrathecal α2δ-1 antisense oligonucleotides on α2δ-1 subunit expression and neuropathic allodynia in the nerve-ligated rats. Our data indicated that spinal nerve injury resulted in time-dependent α2δ-1 subunit upregulation in the spinal dorsal horn that correlated temporally with neuropathic allodynia development and maintenance. Dorsal rhizotomy diminished basal level expression and blocked injury-induced expression of the spinal dorsal horn α2δ-1 subunit and reversed injury-induced tactile allodynia. In addition, intrathecal α2δ-1 antisense oligonucleotides blocked injury-induced dorsal horn α2δ-1 subunit upregulation and diminished tactile allodynia. These findings indicate that α2δ-1 subunit basal expression occurs presynaptically and postsynaptically in spinal dorsal horn. Nerve injury induces mainly presynaptic α2δ- 1 subunit expression that derives from increased α2δ-1 subunit in injured DRG neurons. Thus, changes in presynaptic α2δ-1 subunit expression contribute to injury-induced spinal neuroplasticity and central sensitization that underlies neuropathic pain development and maintenance.
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Li, C. Y., Song, Y. H., Higuera, E. S., & Luo, Z. D. (2004). Spinal dorsal horn calcium channel α2δ-1 subunit upregulation contributes to peripheral nerve injury-induced tactile allodynia. Journal of Neuroscience, 24(39), 8494–8499. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2982-04.2004
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