Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (irritable bowel syndrome)
8,033 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pain symptoms in several chronic pain disorders in women, including irritable bowel syndrome, fluctuate with the menstrual cycle suggesting a gonadal hormone component. In female rats, estrogens modulate visceral sensitivity although the underlying mechanism(s) are unknown. In the present study the effects of 17-beta estradiol on N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor signaling of colorectal nociceptive processing in the spinal cord were examined. Estrogen receptor alpha and the NR1 subunit of the NMDA receptor are co-expressed in dorsal horn neurons, supporting a direct action of estradiol on NMDA receptors. Intrathecal administration of the NMDA receptor antagonist D(-)-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (APV) dose-dependently attenuated the visceromotor response with greater potency in ovariectomized (OVx) rats compared to OVx with estradiol replacement (E2) rats. Estradiol significantly increased protein expression of NR1 in the lumbosacral spinal cord compared to OVx rats. Colorectal distention significantly increased phosphorylation of NR1ser-897, a PKA phosphorylation site on the NR1 subunit in E2, but not OVx rats. Intrathecal administration of a PKA inhibitor significantly attenuated the visceromotor response, decreased NR1 phosphorylation and increased the potency of APV to attenuate the visceromotor response compared to vehicle-treated E2 rats. These data suggest that estradiol increases spinal processing of visceral nociception by increasing NMDA receptor NR1 subunit expression and increasing site-specific receptor phosphorylation on the NR1 subunit contributing to an increase in NMDA receptor activity.
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PMID:Estrogen alters spinal NMDA receptor activity via a PKA signaling pathway in a visceral pain model in the rat. 1806 1

We investigated the participation of cyclin-dependent kinase-5 (Cdk5)-mediated N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) NR2B subunit phosphorylation in cross-organ reflex sensitization caused by colon irritation. The external urethral sphincter electromyogram (EUSE) reflex activity evoked by the pelvic afferent nerve test stimulation (TS, 1 stimulation/30s) and protein expression in the spinal cord and dorsal root ganglion tissue (T13-L2 and L6-S2 ipsilateral to the stimulation) in response to colon mustard oil (MO) instillation were tested in anesthetized rats. When compared with a baseline reflex activity with a single action potential evoked by the TS before the administration of test agents, MO instillation into the descending colon sensitized the evoked activity characterized by elongated firing in the reflex activity in association with increased protein levels of Cdk5, PSD95, and phosphorylated NR2B (pNR2B) but not of total NR2B (tNR2B) in the spinal cord tissue. Both cross-organ reflex sensitization and increments in protein expression were reversed by intra-colonic pretreatments with ruthenium red (a non-selective transient receptor potential vanilloid, TRPV, antagonist), capsaizepine (a TRPV1-selective antagonist), lidocaine (a nerve conduction blocker) as well as by the intra-thecal pretreatment with APV (a NRMDR antagonist) Co-101244 (a NR2B-selective antagonist) and roscovitine (a Cdk5 antagonist). Moreover, compared with the control group, both the increase in pNR2B and the cross-organ reflex sensitization were attenuated in the si-RNA of NR2B rats. All these results suggested that Cdk-dependent NMDAR NR2B subunit phosphorylation mediates the development of cross-organ pelvic-urethra reflex sensitization caused by acute colon irritation which could possibly underlie the high concurrence of pelvic pain syndrome with irritable bowel syndrome.
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PMID:Colon mustard oil instillation induced cross-organ reflex sensitization on the pelvic-urethra reflex activity in rats. 1916 22