Role of α5-containing nicotinic receptors in neuropathic pain and response to nicotine

Dimitris N. Xanthos, Johannes W. Beiersdorf, Ariane Thrun, Bogdan Ianosi, Avi Orr-Urtreger, Sigismund Huck, Petra Scholze*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Nicotinic receptors in the central nervous system (nAChRs) are known to play important roles in pain processing and modulate behavioral responses to analgesic drugs, including nicotine. The presence of the α5-neuronal nicotinic accessory subunit in the nicotinic receptor complex is increasingly understood to modulate reward and aversive states, addiction, and possibly pathological pain. In the current study, using α5-knockout (KO) mice and subunit-specific antibodies, we assess the role of α5-containing neuronal nicotinic receptors in neuropathic pain and in the analgesic response to nicotine. After chronic constriction injury (CCI) or partial sciatic nerve ligation (PSNL), no differences in mechanical, heat, or cold hyperalgesia were found in wild-type (WT) versus α5-KO littermate mice. The number of α5-containing nAChRs was decreased (rather than increased) after CCI in the spinal cord and in the thalamus. Nevertheless, thermal analgesic response to nicotine was marginally reduced in CCI α5-KO mice at 4 days after CCI, but not at later timepoints or after PSNL. Interestingly, upon daily intermittent nicotine injections in unoperated mice, WT animals developed tolerance to nicotine-induced analgesia to a larger extent than α5-KO mice. Our results suggest that α5-containing nAChRs mediate analgesic tolerance to nicotine but do not play a major role in neuropathic pain.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)37-49
Number of pages13
JournalNeuropharmacology
Volume95
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2015

Funding

FundersFunder number
Austrian Science FundP19325-B09

    Keywords

    • Accessory subunit
    • Central nervous system
    • Neuropathic
    • Nicotine
    • Nicotinic receptor
    • Pain
    • Tolerance
    • α5

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