L-Acetylcarnitine induces analgesia by selectively up-regulating mglu2 metabotropic glutamate receptors
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2002
abstract:
L-Acetylcarnitine (LAC, 100 mg/kg, s.c.), a drug commonly used for the
treatment of painful neuropathies, substantially reduced mechanical
allodynia in rats subjected to monolateral chronic constriction injury
(CCI) of the sciatic nerve and also attenuated acute thermal pain in
intact rats. In both cases, induction of analgesia required repeated
injections of LAC, suggesting that the drug induces plastic changes within
the nociceptive pathway. In both CCI- and sham-operated rats, a 24-day
treatment with LAC increased the expression of metabotropic glutamate
(mGlu) receptors 2 and 3 in the lumbar segment of the spinal cord, without
changing the expression of mGlu1a or -5 receptors. A similar up-regulation
of mGlu2/3 receptors was detected in the dorsal horns and dorsal root
ganglia of intact rats treated with LAC for 5-7 days, a time sufficient
for the induction of thermal analgesia. Immunohistochemical analysis
showed that LAC treatment enhanced mGlu2/3 immunoreactivity in the inner
part of lamina II and in laminae III and IV of the spinal cord. An
increased mGlu2/3 receptor expression was also observed in the cerebral
cortex but not in the hippocampus or cerebellum of LAC-treated animals.
Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction combined with Northern
blot analysis showed that repeated LAC injections selectively induced
mGlu2 mRNA in the dorsal horns and cerebral cortex (but not in the
hippocampus). mGlu3 mRNA levels did not change in any brain region of LAC-
treated animals. To examine whether the selective up-regulation of mGlu2
receptors had any role in LAC-induced analgesia, we have used the novel
compound LY 341495, which is a potent and systemically active mGlu2/3
receptor antagonist. LAC-induced analgesia was largely reduced 45 to 75
min after a single injection of LY 341495 (1 mg/kg, i.p.) in both CCI rats
tested for mechanical allodynia and intact rats tested for thermal pain.
We conclude that LAC produces analgesia against chronic pain produced not
only by peripheral nerve injury but also by acute pain in intact animals
and that LAC-induced analgesia is associated with and causally related to
a selective up-regulation of mGlu2 receptors. This offers the first
example of a selective induction of mGlu2 receptors and discloses a novel
mechanism for drug-induced analgesia.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
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