Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0184567 (acute pain)
3,962 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Adenosine is released from metabolically active cells by facilitated diffusion, and is generated extracellularly by degradation of released ATP. It is a potent biological mediator that modulates the activity of numerous cell types, including various neuronal populations, platelets, neutrophils and mast cells, and smooth muscle cells in bronchi and vasculature. Most of these effects help to protect cells and tissues during stress conditions such as ischaemia. Adenosine mediates its effects through four receptor subtypes: the A1, A2a, A2b and A3 receptors. The A2a receptor (A2aR) is abundant in basal ganglia, vasculature and platelets, and stimulates adenylyl cyclase. It is a major target of caffeine, the most widely used psychoactive drug. Here we investigate the role of the A2a receptor by disrupting the gene in mice. We found that A2aR-knockout (A2aR-/-) mice were viable and bred normally. Their exploratory activity was reduced, whereas caffeine, which normally stimulates exploratory behaviour, became a depressant of exploratory activity. Knockout animals scored higher in anxiety tests, and male mice were much more aggressive towards intruders. The response of A2aR-/- mice to acute pain stimuli was slower. Blood pressure and heart rate were increased, as well as platelet aggregation. The specific A2a agonist CGS 21680 lost its biological activity in all systems tested.
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PMID:Aggressiveness, hypoalgesia and high blood pressure in mice lacking the adenosine A2a receptor. 926 92

P2X3 and P2X2/3 receptors are highly localized on peripheral and central processes of sensory afferent nerves, and activation of these channels contributes to the pronociceptive effects of ATP. A-317491 is a novel non-nucleotide antagonist of P2X3 and P2X2/3 receptor activation. A-317491 potently blocked recombinant human and rat P2X3 and P2X2/3 receptor-mediated calcium flux (Ki = 22-92 nM) and was highly selective (IC50 >10 microM) over other P2 receptors and other neurotransmitter receptors, ion channels, and enzymes. A-317491 also blocked native P2X3 and P2X2/3 receptors in rat dorsal root ganglion neurons. Blockade of P2X3 containing channels was stereospecific because the R-enantiomer (A-317344) of A-317491 was significantly less active at P2X3 and P2X2/3 receptors. A-317491 dose-dependently (ED50 = 30 micromolkg s.c.) reduced complete Freund's adjuvant-induced thermal hyperalgesia in the rat. A-317491 was most potent (ED50 = 10-15 micromolkg s.c.) in attenuating both thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia after chronic nerve constriction injury. The R-enantiomer, A-317344, was inactive in these chronic pain models. Although active in chronic pain models, A-317491 was ineffective (ED50 >100 micromolkg s.c.) in reducing nociception in animal models of acute pain, postoperative pain, and visceral pain. The present data indicate that a potent and selective antagonist of P2X3 and P2X2/3 receptors effectively reduces both nerve injury and chronic inflammatory nociception, but P2X3 and P2X2/3 receptor activation may not be a major mediator of acute, acute inflammatory, or visceral pain.
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PMID:A-317491, a novel potent and selective non-nucleotide antagonist of P2X3 and P2X2/3 receptors, reduces chronic inflammatory and neuropathic pain in the rat. 1248 51

In 1995 the P2X3 receptor was found to be expressed at high levels in nociceptive sensory neurones, consistent with earlier reports that ATP induced pain in humans and animals. At first it was thought that ATP was most likely to play a role in acute pain, following its release from damaged or stressed cells and since then a wide variety of experimental techniques and approaches have been used to study this possibility. Whilst it is clear that exogenous and endogenous ATP can indeed acutely stimulate sensory neurones, more recent reports using gene knockout and antisense oligonucleotide technologies, and a novel, selective P2X3 antagonist, A-317491, all indicate that ATP and P2X3 receptors are more likely to be involved in chronic pain conditions, particularly chronic inflammatory and neuropathic pain. These reports indicate that P2X3 receptors on sensory nerves may be tonically activated by ATP released from nearby damaged or stressed cells, or perhaps from the sensory nerves themselves. This signal, when transmitted to the CNS, will be perceived consciously as chronic pain. In addition, it is now clear that several subtypes of P2Y receptor are also expressed in sensory neurones. Although their distribution and functions have not been as widely studied as P2X receptors, the effects that they mediate indicate that they might also be considered as therapeutic targets in the treatment of pain. Although our ability to treat persistent painful conditions, such as chronic inflammatory and neuropathic pain, has improved in recent years, these conditions are often resistant to currently available therapies, such as opioids or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. This reflects a limited understanding of the underlying pathophysiology. It is now clear that the development and maintenance of chronic pain are mediated by multiple factors, but many of these factors, and the receptors and mechanisms through which they act, remain to be identified. Chronic pain is debilitating and can greatly decrease quality of life, not just due to the pain per se, but also because of the depression that can often ensue. Thus a greater understanding of the mechanisms that underlie chronic pain will help identify new targets for novel analgesics, which will be of great therapeutic benefit to many people.
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PMID:Crossing the pain barrier: P2 receptors as targets for novel analgesics. 1451 72

Kyotorphin (Kyo) is synthesized in specific brain regions where it may modulate synaptic transmission. Kyo directly excites cortical neurons, and indirectly exerts opioid actions to produce analgesia via the release of [Met]-enkephalin. Kyo is formed by a specific enzyme from L-tyrosine, L-arginine (L-arg) and ATP in the presence of Mg2+. Kyo and its analogues Tyr-cav and Tyr(Cl2)-cav exert naloxone-reversible antinociception in the paw-pressure test. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of D-arginine (D-arg) on the analgesic effects of Kyo, Tyr-cav and Tyr(Cl2)-cav during acute pain. The changes in the nociceptive effects were examined in male Wistar rats using the tail flick (TF) and hot plate (HP) tests. Kyo, Tyr-cav, Tyr(Cl2)-cav, L-canavanine (L-cav) and D-arg were applied in rats intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.) at a dose of 20 microg/20 microl. Kyo, Tyr-cav, Tyr(Cl2)-cav and L-cav exerted antinociceptive activity in both tests used. Applied alone, D-arg had no antinociceptive activity in TF and HP tests. D-arg decreased the TF and HP latency of the Kyo, Tyr-cav, Tyr(Cl2)-cav and L-cav. Taken together, these results reveal D-arg as a potential inhibitor of the investigated peptides during acute pain.
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PMID:Effect of D-arginine on antinociception induced by kyotorphin, Tyr-cav, L-cav and Tyr(Cl2)-cav in rats. 1531 11

Ketamine is known to improve opioid efficacy, reduce postoperative opioid requirement and oppose opioid associated pain hypersensitivity and tolerance. However, the mechanisms underlying these beneficial effects are not clear. This study investigated the effects of ketamine at a non-analgesic dose (30 mg/kg, i.p.) on analgesia induced by morphine (2.5, 5.0, 7.5 mg/kg, s.c.), using rat tail-flick test as an animal model of acute pain. Further, the role of opioid-, alpha2-adrenoceptors and ATP-sensitive potassium channels was examined on the potentiating effect of ketamine. Male rats received morphine alone at 5.0 and 7.5 but not at 2.5 mg/kg showed a dose-related increase in tail-flick latencies. The combination of morphine and ketamine resulted in dose-related increase in morphine analgesia, both on the intensity as well as on duration. The ketamine-induced potentiation of morphine (7.5 mg/kg) analgesia was unaffected by glibenclamide (3 mg/kg, s.c.) and only partially blocked by yohimbine (2 mg/kg, i.p.), but more completely abolished by naloxone (2 mg/kg, i.p.). Both morphine (5.0 mg/kg) and ketamine (30 mg/kg) alone did not evoke catalepsy in rats but on combination produced a synergistic effect, which was however, abolished by naloxone pretreatment. In the open-field test, while morphine (5.0 mg/kg) caused a depressant effect, ketamine (30 mg/kg) enhanced the locomotor activity. Nevertheless, in combination potentiated the morphine's depressant effect on locomotion, which was also antagonized by naloxone. These results indicate that ketamine at a non-analgesic dose can potentiate morphine analgesia, induce catalepsy and cause locomotor depression, possibly involving an opioid mechanism. This potentiation, although favorable in acute pain management, may have some adverse clinical implications.
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PMID:Ketamine-induced potentiation of morphine analgesia in rat tail-flick test: role of opioid-, alpha2-adrenoceptors and ATP-sensitive potassium channels. 1639 16

Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (cdk5) is a member of the serine-threonine kinase family of cyclin-dependent kinases. This family is known for its role in the cell cycle, but cdk5 differs due to its interaction with activators p35 or p39, both abundant in post-mitotic neurons. Cdk5 is not known to have a role in cell cycle regulation at all, but is known to be an important modulator of neuronal activity. Cdk5 has been an attractive target for CNS diseases for a number of years. Among its attractions is the possibility that inhibitors will prevent the pathological phosphorylation of tau and neurofibrillary pathology in both Alzheimer's disease and tauopathies. More recently, there has been evidence that cdk5 is involved in the processing of pain and therefore inhibitors would also have potential therapeutic value for acute pain. Several classes of potent chemical inhibitors for cdk5 have been identified but most are competitive with the ATP binding site, resulting in a lack of specificity among the other cyclin-dependent kinases as well as other ATP-dependent kinases. We are working to discover specific inhibitors that might disrupt the interaction of tau and cdk5 at sites other than the ATP binding site. We are screening our compound library of 110,000 compounds using the full length tau as a substrate and will separate ATP competitive from non-competitive binders. In addition, we are taking a computational approach with virtual screening to identify non-ATP-competitive binders. These two approaches may lead to the discovery of site-specific inhibitors for tau and cdk5 interactions rather than competitive inhibitors for ATP binding. The hope is that non-ATP competitive compounds will more likely be selective and will be better therapeutics.
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PMID:New approaches to the discovery of cdk5 inhibitors. 1822 May 19

Altered function of Na+ channels is responsible for increased hyperexcitability of primary afferent neurons that may underlie pathological pain states. Recent evidence suggests that the Nav1.9 subunit is implicated in inflammatory but not acute pain. However, the contribution of Nav1.9 channels to the cellular events underlying nociceptor hyperexcitability is still unknown, and there remains much uncertainty as to the biophysical properties of Nav1.9 current and its modulation by inflammatory mediators. Here, we use gene targeting strategy and computer modeling to identify Nav1.9 channel current signature and its impact on nociceptors' firing patterns. Recordings using internal fluoride in small DRG neurons from wild-type and Nav1.9-null mutant mice demonstrated that Nav1.9 subunits carry the TTX-resistant "persistent" Na+ current called NaN. Nav1.9(-/-) nociceptors showed no significant change in the properties of the slowly inactivating TTX-resistant SNS/Nav1.8 current. The loss in Nav1.9-mediated Na+ currents was associated with the inability of small DRG neurons to generate a large variety of electrophysiological behaviors, including subthreshold regenerative depolarizations, plateau potentials, active hyperpolarizing responses, oscillatory bursting discharges, and bistable membrane behaviors. We further investigated, using CsCl- and KCl-based pipette solutions, whether G-protein signaling pathways and inflammatory mediators upregulate the NaN/Nav1.9 current. Bradykinin, ATP, histamine, prostaglandin-E2, and norepinephrine, applied separately at maximal concentrations, all failed to modulate the Nav1.9 current. However, when applied conjointly as a soup of inflammatory mediators they rapidly potentiated Nav1.9 channel activity, generating subthreshold amplification and increased excitability. We conclude that Nav1.9 channel, the molecular correlate of the NaN current, is potentiated by the concerted action of inflammatory mediators that may contribute to nociceptors' hyperexcitability during peripheral inflammation.
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PMID:Inflammatory mediators increase Nav1.9 current and excitability in nociceptors through a coincident detection mechanism. 1827 Jan 72

There is abundant evidence that extracellular ATP and other nucleotides have an important role in pain signaling at both the periphery and in the CNS. At first, it was thought that ATP was simply involved in acute pain, since ATP is released from damaged cells and excites directly primary sensory neurons by activating their receptors. However, neither blocking P2X/Y receptors pharmacologically nor suppressing the expression of P2X/Y receptors molecularly in sensory neurons or in the spinal cord had an effect on acute physiological pain. The focus of attention now is on the possibility that endogenous ATP and its receptor system might be activated in pathological pain states, particularly in neuropathic pain. Neuropathic pain is often a consequence of nerve injury through surgery, bone compression, diabetes or infection. This type of pain can be so severe that even light touching can be intensely painful; unfortunately, this state is generally resistant to currently available treatments. An important advance in our understanding of the mechanisms involved in neuropathic pain has been made by a recent work demonstrating the crucial role of ATP receptors (i.e., P2X(3) and P2X(4) receptors). In this review, we summarize the role of ATP receptors, particularly the P2X(4) receptor, in neuropathic pain. The expression of P2X(4) receptors in the spinal cord is enhanced in spinal microglia after peripheral nerve injury, and blocking pharmacologically and suppressing molecularly P2X(4) receptors produce a reduction of the neuropathic pain behaviour. Understanding the key roles of ATP receptors including P2X(4) receptors may lead to new strategies for the management of neuropathic pain.
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PMID:ATP receptors in pain sensation: Involvement of spinal microglia and P2X(4) receptors. 1840 95

Nociceptive primary afferents have the capacity to induce a state of increased excitability in the dorsal horn neurons of the spinal cord. It is well accepted that capsaicin-sensitive C-fibers transduce noxious stimulation and acute pain and that capsaicin-insensitive A beta-fibers are responsible for touch and innocuous sensation. It has been reported that the intrathecal (i.t.) administration of prostaglandin F(2 alpha) (PGF(2 alpha)) and ATP induces mechanical allodynia via the capsaicin-insensitive primary afferent pathway. In the present study, we investigated the interaction of purinoceptor P2X and the PGF(2 alpha) receptor (FP) in the induction of allodynia by use of mice lacking FP (FP(-/-)). Both PGF(2 alpha) and the P2X receptor agonist alphabeta-methylene ATP administered i.t. strongly induced allodynia for 50 min by tactile stimuli to the flank of mice. The allodynia induced by alphabeta-methylene ATP, but not that by PGF(2 alpha), was suppressed by simultaneous i.t. administration of P2X receptor antagonists pyridoxalphosphate-6-azophenyl-2,4-disulphonic acid and A-317491. In contrast, the allodynia induced by alphabeta-methylene ATP as well as that by PGF(2 alpha) was not observed in FP(-/-) mice. Immunostaining of beta-galactosidase, a reporter knocked into the endogenous FP locus in FP(-/-) mice, showed that the FP receptor was co-localized with P2X(2) and P2X(3) receptors in neurons of the spinal cord. alphabeta-Methylene ATP evoked a transient or sustained [Ca(2+)](i) increase in most of the PGF(2 alpha)-responsive cells in the deeper layer of the spinal cord, and the alphabeta-methylene ATP-evoked increase was blocked by the FP receptor antagonist AL-8810 in two-thirds of the cells. Neither PGF(2 alpha) nor alphabeta-methylene ATP induced the activation of spinal microglia. The present study demonstrates that the alphabeta-methylene ATP-evoked allodynia is mediated by the FP receptor, possibly via the functional coupling between the activation of P2X(2/3) receptors on the central terminal of capsaicin-insensitive fibers and FP receptors on spinal neurons.
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PMID:Involvement of prostaglandin F 2 alpha receptor in ATP-induced mechanical allodynia. 1949 Sep 31

Mediators of neuromuscular transmission in rat bladder strips were dissected pharmacologically to examine their susceptibilities to inhibition by botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) and elucidate a basis for the clinical effectiveness of BoNT/A in alleviating smooth muscle spasms associated with overactive bladder. BoNT/A, BoNT/C1, or BoNT/E reduced peak and average force of muscle contractions induced by electric field stimulation (EFS) in dose-dependent manners by acting only on neurogenic, tetrodotoxin-sensitive responses. BoNTs that cleaved vesicle-associated membrane protein proved to be much less effective. Acetylcholine (ACh) and ATP were found to provide virtually all excitatory input, because EFS-evoked contractions were abolished by the muscarinic receptor antagonist, atropine, combined with either a desensitizing agonist of P2X(1) and P2X(3) or a nonselective ATP receptor antagonist. Both transmitters were released in the innervated muscle layer and, thus, persisted after removal of urothelium. Atropine or a desensitizer of the P2X(1) or P2X(3) receptors did not alter the rate at which muscle contractions were weakened by BoNT/A. Moreover, although cholinergic and purinergic signaling could be partially delineated by using high-frequency EFS (which intensified a transient, largely atropine-resistant spike in muscle contractions that was reduced after P2X receptor desensitization), they proved equally susceptible to BoNT/A. Thus, equi-potent blockade of ATP co-released with ACh from muscle efferents probably contributes to the effectiveness of BoNT/A in treating bladder overactivity, including nonresponders to anticholinergic drugs. Because purinergic receptors are known mediators of sensory afferent excitation, inhibition of efferent ATP release by BoNT/A could also help to ameliorate acute pain and urgency sensation reported by some recipients.
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PMID:Excitatory cholinergic and purinergic signaling in bladder are equally susceptible to botulinum neurotoxin a consistent with co-release of transmitters from efferent fibers. 2057 97


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