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Conditional gene deletion reveals functional redundancy of GABA(B )receptors in peripheral nociceptors in vivo

BACKGROUND: γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is an important inhibitory neurotransmitter which mainly mediates its effects on neurons via ionotropic (GABA(A)) and metabotropic (GABA(B)) receptors. GABA(B )receptors are widely expressed in the central and the peripheral nervous system. Although there is ev...

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Autores principales: Gangadharan, Vijayan, Agarwal, Nitin, Brugger, Stefan, Tegeder, Imgard, Bettler, Bernhard, Kuner, Rohini, Kurejova, Martina
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2785766/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19925671
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1744-8069-5-68
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author Gangadharan, Vijayan
Agarwal, Nitin
Brugger, Stefan
Tegeder, Imgard
Bettler, Bernhard
Kuner, Rohini
Kurejova, Martina
author_facet Gangadharan, Vijayan
Agarwal, Nitin
Brugger, Stefan
Tegeder, Imgard
Bettler, Bernhard
Kuner, Rohini
Kurejova, Martina
author_sort Gangadharan, Vijayan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is an important inhibitory neurotransmitter which mainly mediates its effects on neurons via ionotropic (GABA(A)) and metabotropic (GABA(B)) receptors. GABA(B )receptors are widely expressed in the central and the peripheral nervous system. Although there is evidence for a key function of GABA(B )receptors in the modulation of pain, the relative contribution of peripherally- versus centrally-expressed GABA(B )receptors is unclear. RESULTS: In order to elucidate the functional relevance of GABA(B )receptors expressed in peripheral nociceptive neurons in pain modulation we generated and analyzed conditional mouse mutants lacking functional GABA(B(1) )subunit specifically in nociceptors, preserving expression in the spinal cord and brain (SNS-GABA(B(1))(-/- )mice). Lack of the GABA(B(1) )subunit precludes the assembly of functional GABA(B )receptor. We analyzed SNS-GABA(B(1))(-/- )mice and their control littermates in several models of acute and neuropathic pain. Electrophysiological studies on peripheral afferents revealed higher firing frequencies in SNS-GABA(B(1))(-/- )mice compared to corresponding control littermates. However no differences were seen in basal nociceptive sensitivity between these groups. The development of neuropathic and chronic inflammatory pain was similar across the two genotypes. The duration of nocifensive responses evoked by intraplantar formalin injection was prolonged in the SNS-GABA(B(1))(-/- )animals as compared to their control littermates. Pharmacological experiments revealed that systemic baclofen-induced inhibition of formalin-induced nociceptive behaviors was not dependent upon GABA(B(1) )expression in nociceptors. CONCLUSION: This study addressed contribution of GABA(B )receptors expressed on primary afferent nociceptive fibers to the modulation of pain. We observed that neither the development of acute and chronic pain nor the analgesic effects of a systematically-delivered GABA(B )agonist was significantly changed upon a specific deletion of GABA(B )receptors from peripheral nociceptive neurons in vivo. This lets us conclude that GABA(B )receptors in the peripheral nervous system play a less important role than those in the central nervous system in the regulation of pain.
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spelling pubmed-27857662009-12-01 Conditional gene deletion reveals functional redundancy of GABA(B )receptors in peripheral nociceptors in vivo Gangadharan, Vijayan Agarwal, Nitin Brugger, Stefan Tegeder, Imgard Bettler, Bernhard Kuner, Rohini Kurejova, Martina Mol Pain Research BACKGROUND: γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is an important inhibitory neurotransmitter which mainly mediates its effects on neurons via ionotropic (GABA(A)) and metabotropic (GABA(B)) receptors. GABA(B )receptors are widely expressed in the central and the peripheral nervous system. Although there is evidence for a key function of GABA(B )receptors in the modulation of pain, the relative contribution of peripherally- versus centrally-expressed GABA(B )receptors is unclear. RESULTS: In order to elucidate the functional relevance of GABA(B )receptors expressed in peripheral nociceptive neurons in pain modulation we generated and analyzed conditional mouse mutants lacking functional GABA(B(1) )subunit specifically in nociceptors, preserving expression in the spinal cord and brain (SNS-GABA(B(1))(-/- )mice). Lack of the GABA(B(1) )subunit precludes the assembly of functional GABA(B )receptor. We analyzed SNS-GABA(B(1))(-/- )mice and their control littermates in several models of acute and neuropathic pain. Electrophysiological studies on peripheral afferents revealed higher firing frequencies in SNS-GABA(B(1))(-/- )mice compared to corresponding control littermates. However no differences were seen in basal nociceptive sensitivity between these groups. The development of neuropathic and chronic inflammatory pain was similar across the two genotypes. The duration of nocifensive responses evoked by intraplantar formalin injection was prolonged in the SNS-GABA(B(1))(-/- )animals as compared to their control littermates. Pharmacological experiments revealed that systemic baclofen-induced inhibition of formalin-induced nociceptive behaviors was not dependent upon GABA(B(1) )expression in nociceptors. CONCLUSION: This study addressed contribution of GABA(B )receptors expressed on primary afferent nociceptive fibers to the modulation of pain. We observed that neither the development of acute and chronic pain nor the analgesic effects of a systematically-delivered GABA(B )agonist was significantly changed upon a specific deletion of GABA(B )receptors from peripheral nociceptive neurons in vivo. This lets us conclude that GABA(B )receptors in the peripheral nervous system play a less important role than those in the central nervous system in the regulation of pain. BioMed Central 2009-11-19 /pmc/articles/PMC2785766/ /pubmed/19925671 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1744-8069-5-68 Text en Copyright ©2009 Gangadharan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Gangadharan, Vijayan
Agarwal, Nitin
Brugger, Stefan
Tegeder, Imgard
Bettler, Bernhard
Kuner, Rohini
Kurejova, Martina
Conditional gene deletion reveals functional redundancy of GABA(B )receptors in peripheral nociceptors in vivo
title Conditional gene deletion reveals functional redundancy of GABA(B )receptors in peripheral nociceptors in vivo
title_full Conditional gene deletion reveals functional redundancy of GABA(B )receptors in peripheral nociceptors in vivo
title_fullStr Conditional gene deletion reveals functional redundancy of GABA(B )receptors in peripheral nociceptors in vivo
title_full_unstemmed Conditional gene deletion reveals functional redundancy of GABA(B )receptors in peripheral nociceptors in vivo
title_short Conditional gene deletion reveals functional redundancy of GABA(B )receptors in peripheral nociceptors in vivo
title_sort conditional gene deletion reveals functional redundancy of gaba(b )receptors in peripheral nociceptors in vivo
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2785766/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19925671
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1744-8069-5-68
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