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1.
To understand the role of opioids and their receptors in chronic pain following peripheral nerve injury, we have studied the mu-opioid receptor in rat and monkey lumbar 4 and 5 dorsal root ganglion neurons and the superficial dorsal horn of the spinal cord under normal circumstances and after peripheral axotomy. Our results show that many small neurons in rat and monkey dorsal root ganglia, and some medium-sized and large neurons in rat dorsal root ganglia, express mu-opioid receptor-like immunoreactivity. Most of these neurons contain calcitonin gene-related peptide. The mu-opioid receptor was closely associated with the somatic plasmalemma of the dorsal root ganglion neurons. Both mu-opioid receptor-immunoreactive nerve fibers and cell bodies were observed in lamina II of the dorsal horn. The highest intensity of mu-opioid receptor-like immunoreactivity was observed in the deep part of lamina II. Most mu-opioid receptor-like immunoreactivity in the dorsal horn originated from spinal neurons. A few mu-opioid receptor-positive peripheral afferent terminals in the rat and monkey dorsal horn were calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive. In addition to pre- and post-junctional receptors in rat and monkey dorsal horn neurons, mu-opioid receptors were localized on the presynaptic membrane of some synapses of primary afferent terminals in the monkey dorsal horn. Peripheral axotomy caused a reduction in the number and intensity of mu-opioid receptor-positive neurons in the rat and monkey dorsal root ganglia, and of mu-opioid receptor-like immunoreactivity in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. The decrease in mu-opioid receptor-like immunoreactivity was more pronounced in the monkey than in the rat dorsal root ganglia and spinal cord. It is probable that there was a parallel trans-synaptic down-regulation of mu-opioid-like immunoreactivity in local dorsal horn neurons of the monkey. These data suggest that one factor underlying the well known insensitivity of neuropathic pain to opioid analgesics could be due to a marked reduction in the number of mu-opioid receptors in the axotomized sensory neurons and in interneurons in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.  相似文献   

2.
Neuropeptide expression in primary sensory neurons is highly plastic in response to peripheral nerve axotomy. While neuropeptide changes following complete sciatic nerve injury have been extensively studied, much less is known about the effects of partial sciatic nerve injuries on neuropeptide plasticity. Galanin. a possible endogenous analgesic peptide, was up-regulated in primary sensory neurons following complete sciatic nerve injury. We investigated the effects of partial sciatic nerve injuries on galanin expression in primary sensory neurons, and compared this effect with that after complete sciatic nerve injury. Complete transection, partial transection and chronic constriction injury were made, respectively, on the sciatic nerves of three groups of rats at high thigh level. Animals were allowed to survive for four and 14 days before being killed. L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglia, L4 5 spinal cord and lower brainstem were processed for galanin immunocytochemical staining. After all three types of sciatic nerve injuries, galanin-immunoreactive neurons were significantly increased in the ipsilateral dorsal root ganglia, and galanin-immunoreactive axonal fibres were dramatically increased in the superficial laminae of the dorsal horn and the gracile nuclei, compared to the contralateral side. However, in partial injury models, the percentages of galanin-immunoreactive dorsal root ganglion neurons were significantly higher than in complete nerve transection. Size frequency distribution analysis detected that more medium- and large-size galanin-immunoreactive dorsal root ganglion neurons were present after partial nerve transection and constriction injury than after complete nerve transection. Using a combined approach of retrograde tracing of flurorescent dyes and galanin immunostaining, we found that a partial transection increased the proportions of galanin-immunoreactive neurons among both axotomized and non-axotomized neurons. Galanin-immunoreactive axonal fibres were not only detected in the superficial laminae, but also in the deeper laminae of the dorsal horn of partial injury animals. Furthermore, more galanin-immunoreactive axonal fibres were observed in the ipsilateral gracile nuclei of partially injured rats than in completely injured rats. We conclude that partial sciatic nerve injuries induced greater galanin up-regulation in medium- and large-size dorsal root ganglion neurons than complete sciatic nerve injury. Galanin expression in primary sensory neurons seems to be differentially regulated following partial and complete sciatic nerve injuries.  相似文献   

3.
The P2X3 receptor subunit, a member of the P2X family of ATP-gated ion channels, is almost exclusively localized in sensory neurons. In the present study, we sought to gain insight into the role of P2X3 and P2X3-containing neurons in sensory transmission, using immunohistochemical approaches. In rat dorsal root ganglia (DRG), P2X3-immunoreactivity (-ir) was observed in small- and medium-sized neurons. Approximately 40% of DRG neuronal profiles in normal rats contained P2X3-ir. In rats that had received neonatal capsaicin treatment, the number of P2X3-positive neurons was decreased by approximately 70%. Analysis of the colocalization of P2X3-ir with cytochemical markers of DRG neurons indicated that approximately 94% of the P2X3-positive neuronal profiles were labelled by isolectin B4 from Bandeiraea simplicifolia, while only 3% contained substance P-ir, and 7% contained somatostatin-ir. In dorsal horn of rat spinal cord, P2X3-ir was observed in the inner portion of lamina II and was reduced subsequent to dorsal rhizotomy, as well as subsequent to neonatal capsaicin treatment. Finally, P2X3-ir accumulated proximal to the site of sciatic nerve ligation, and was seen in nerve fibres in skin and corneal epithelium. In summary, our results suggest that P2X3 is expressed by a functionally heterogeneous population of BSI-B4-binding sensory neurons, and is transported into both central and peripheral processes of these neurons.  相似文献   

4.
Partial nerve injury is more likely to cause neuropathic pain than complete nerve injury. We have compared the changes in neuropeptide expression in primary sensory neurons which follow complete and partial injuries to determine if these might be involved. Since more neurons are damaged by complete injury, we expected that complete sciatic nerve injury would simply cause greater increases in neuropeptide Y and vasoactive intestinal peptide than partial injury. We examined neuropeptide Y and vasoactive intestinal peptide immunoreactivities in L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglia, the dorsal horn of L4-L5 spinal cord, and the gracile nuclei of rats killed 14 days after unilateral complete sciatic nerve transection, partial sciatic nerve transection and chronic constriction injury of the sciatic nerves. In all three groups of rats, neuropeptide Y- and vasoactive intestinal peptide-immunoreactive neurons were increased in the ipsilateral L4 and L5 dorsal root ganglion when compared with the contralateral side. Most neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive neurons were of medium and large size, but a few were small. Neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive axonal fibers were increased from laminae I to IV, and vasoactive intestinal peptide-immunoreactive axonal fibers were increased in laminae I and II, of the ipsilateral dorsal horn of L4-L5 spinal cord. The increases of neuropeptide Y and vasoactive intestinal peptide immunoreactivities in the dorsal horn were similar among the three groups. However, only after constriction injury were some vasoactive intestinal peptide-immunoreactive neurons seen in the deeper laminae of the ipsilateral dorsal horn. Robust neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive axonal fibers and some neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive cells were seen in the ipsilateral gracile nuclei of all three groups of animals, but neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive cells were more prominent after constriction injury. Contrary to our expectations, partial and complete sciatic nerve injuries induced similar increases in neuropeptide Y and vasoactive intestinal peptide in lumbar dorsal root ganglion neurons and their central projections in the dorsal horn and the gracile nuclei two weeks after injury. Some neurons whose axons were spared by partial injury may also increase neuropeptide Y or vasoactive intestinal peptide expression. Altered neuropeptide release from these functional sensory neurons may play a role in neuropathic pain.  相似文献   

5.
In the present study, we investigated and compared the ability of the cholera toxin B subunit, wheat germ agglutinin and isolectin B4 from Griffonia simplicifolia I conjugated to horseradish peroxidase, to retrogradely and transganglionically label visceral primary afferents after unilateral injections into the rat urinary bladder wall. Horseradish peroxidase histochemical or lectin-immunofluorescence histochemical labelling of bladder afferents was seen in the L6-S1 spinal cord segments and in the T13-L2 and L6-S1 dorsal root ganglia. In the lumbosacral spinal cord, the most intense and extensive labelling of bladder afferents was seen when cholera toxin B subunit-horseradish peroxidase was injected. Cholera toxin B subunit-horseradish peroxidase-labelled fibres were found in Lissauer's tract, its lateral and medial collateral projections, and laminae I and IV-VI of the spinal gray matter. Labelled fibres were numerous in the lateral collateral projection and extended into the spinal parasympathetic nucleus. Labelling from both the lateral and medial projections extended into the dorsal grey commissural region. Wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase labelling produced a similar pattern but was not as dense and extensive as that of cholera toxin B subunit-horseradish peroxidase. The isolectin B4 from Griffonia simplicifolia I-horseradish peroxidase-labelled fibres, on the other hand, were fewer and only observed in the lateral collateral projection and occasionally in lamina I. Cell profile counts showed that a larger number of dorsal root ganglion cells were labelled with cholera toxin B subunit-horseradish peroxidase than with wheat germ agglutinin- or isolectin B4-horseradish peroxidase. In the L6-S1 dorsal root ganglia, the majority (81%) of the cholera toxin B subunit-, and almost all of the wheat germ agglutinin- and isolectin B4-immunoreactive cells were RT97-negative (an anti-neurofilament antibody that labels dorsal root ganglion neurons with myelinated fibres). Double labelling with other neuronal markers showed that 71%, 43% and 36% of the cholera toxin B subunit-immunoreactive cells were calcitonin gene-related peptide-, isolectin B4-binding- and substance P-positive, respectively. A few cholera toxin B subunit cells showed galanin-immunoreactivity, but none were somatostatin-, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-, or neuropeptide Y-immunoreactive or contained fluoride-resistant acid phosphatase. The results show that cholera toxin B subunit-horseradish peroxidase is a more effective retrograde and transganglionic tracer for pelvic primary afferents from the urinary bladder than wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase and isolectin B4-horseradish peroxidase, but in contrast to somatic nerves, it is transported mainly by unmyelinated fibres in the visceral afferents.  相似文献   

6.
Neurokinin A-like immunoreactivity of dorsal root ganglion neurons innervating the kidney were studied with retrograde tracing of FluoroGold dye applied to the cut renal nerves. The proportions and sizes of renal afferent neurons with neurokinin A-like immunoreactivity were quantified in T9-L2 dorsal root ganglia from five rats. Of 240 renal afferent neuronal somata examined, 26 +/- 3% (S.E.M.) showed neurokinin A-like immunoreactivity. Compared with the overall size distribution of renal afferent neurons, those staining for neurokinin A were mostly small-sized neurons with a few medium-sized neurons. All somata with neurokinin A-like immunoreactivity were neurofilament-poor as judged by labelling with an anti-neurofilament antibody, RT97, and it is therefore likely that they had unmyelinated fibres. To examine the sites to which the renal afferent fibres with neurokinin A might project, sections of rat and guinea-pig kidney and upper ureter were examined. Fibres with neurokinin A-like immunoreactivity were found beneath and within the transitional epithelium lining the inner surface of the pelvis, and within the smooth muscle layer beneath the transitional epithelium. Epithelial innervation was found only in regions with underlying smooth muscle and loose connective tissue, and not in sites where the epithelium was closely applied to the renal parenchyma. The network of fibres was most dense towards the pelvo-uretic junction. Fibres with neurokinin A-like immunoreactivity were not seen beneath or within the cuboidal/columnar epithelium covering the papilla within the renal pelvis. Furthermore, only very few fibres with neurokinin A were observed penetrating the transitional epithelium of the upper ureter in both rat and guinea-pig. The distribution of fibres labelled with antibodies to substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide in the renal pelvis was similar to that for fibres with neurokinin A-like immuno-reactivity, although a few fibres penetrated further into the fornices than fibres with neurokinin-A-like immunoreactivity. Thus, many afferent fibres in the renal pelvis may contain neurokinin A as well as substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide. These fibres may be the source of the neurokinin A, substance P and calcitonin gene-related peptide which can be released by topical capsaicin treatment. In addition they may be the mechano- and chemo-receptive fibres in the renal pelvis that are known to play important roles in renal haemodynamics. The intra-epithelial position of some of these fibres in the epithelial layer suggests a possible chemosensory or osmosensory role.  相似文献   

7.
Recombinant herpes simplex virus-1 encoding the rat preproenkephalin A (HSVLatEnk1) was generated for driving the expression of preproenkephalin A-derived peptides in dorsal root ganglia of rats in vivo. Three weeks after infection via the hind footpads, quantitative RT-PCR and in situ hybridization experiments showed a strong expression of preproenkephalin A mRNA in lumbar dorsal root ganglia. In addition, a 40-160% increase in radioimmunoassayable Met-enkephalin-like material concentrations was found in the dorsal spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia, respectively, at the lumbar level in HSVLatEnk1-infected rats as compared with animals infected with beta-galactosidase-encoding recombinant herpes simplex virus-1 or control rats. These data demonstrate the efficacy of the preproenkephalin A encoding vector and suggest that it should help in elucidating the role of Met-enkephalin-containing primary afferent fibers in pain transmission and/or control.  相似文献   

8.
Sympathetic nerve activity is maintained after high spinal injury through circuits that remain in question. We evaluated patterns of c-fos gene induction as a monitor of spinal neurons responding to high spinal cord transection in the rat. Rats were anesthetized with isofluorane. Lower cervical or upper thoracic spinal segments were exposed, immersed in warm mineral oil and transected. Spinal cords were exposed but not transected in anesthetized controls. After 2.5 h, spinalized and control rats were perfused for immunocytochemistry. Cervical and thoracolumbar spinal segments and dorsal root ganglia were sectioned coronally. Tissues were incubated in primary, polyclonal antisera raised in rabbit or sheep against a peptide sequence unique to the N-terminal domain of Fos, and processed immunocytochemically. Neurons were induced to express Fos-like immunoreactivity (FLI), bilaterally, in the spinal gray, but not in primary sensory ganglia. Spinal cord transection induced neurons to express FLI in thoracic laminae I, IIo (outer substantia gelatinosa), Vre (lateral reticulated division), VII (lamina intermedia) and X, and the intermediolateral cell column. Lamina VIII was also labeled in spinal-injured but not in control animals. Immunolabeled nuclei were prominent in lumbar segments and were concentrated in the medial third of laminae I and IIo, and in laminae VII and X. Few cells were labeled in upper cervical or sacral segments. FLI was sparse in the spinal gray of controls and expressed mainly within the dorsal root entry zone of upper thoracic segments. Patterns of c-fos gene expression were site-specific and correlated with laminae that respond predominantly to noxious stimulation and that contain sympathetic interneurons. Laminae that are responsive to non-noxious stimuli and activated by walking, IIi, nucleus proprius, medial V and layer VI were not induced to express FLI. We conclude that neurons in specific spinal laminae that process high threshold afferents and that harbor neurons with sympathetic nerve-related activity are activated selectively by spinal cord transections. We hypothesize that peripheral afferents processed by spinal-sympathetic circuit neurons may regulate sympathetic discharge in the absence of supraspinal drive.  相似文献   

9.
Primary afferent neurons containing substance P (SP) are apparently implicated in the transmission of noxious information from the periphery to the central nervous system, and SP released from primary afferent neurons acts on second-order neurons with the SP receptor (SPR). In the rat, nociceptive information reached the hypothalamus not only through indirect pathways but also directly through trigeminohypothalamic and spinohypothalamic pathways. Thus, in the present study, the distribution pattern of trigeminohypothalamic and spinohypothalamic tract neurons showing SPR-like immunoreactivity (SPR-LI) was examined in the rat by a retrograde tract-tracing method combined with immunofluorescence histochemistry for SPR. A substantial number of trigeminal and spinal neurons with SPR-LI were retrogradely labeled with Fluoro-Gold (FG) injected into the hypothalamic regions. These neurons were distributed mainly in lamina I of the medullary and spinal dorsal horns, lateral spinal nucleus, regions around the central canal of the spinal cord, and the lateral aspect of the deep part of the spinal dorsal horn. A number of SPR-LI neurons in the spinal parasympathetic nucleus were labeled with FG injected into the area around the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus. Some SPR-LI neurons in the lateral spinal nucleus and the lateral aspect of the deep part of the spinal dorsal horn were also labeled with FG injected into the septal region. On the basis of the distribution areas of SPR-LI trigeminal and spinal neurons projecting to the hypothalamic and septal regions, it is likely that these neurons are involved in the transmission of somatic and/or visceral noxious information.  相似文献   

10.
A number of studies have examined bradykinin-induced sensitization of primary afferent neurons to mechanical or thermal stimuli. However, bradykinin-induced sensitization to other chemical stimuli has not been systematically addressed. We used primary cultures of dorsal root ganglion neurons from neonatal rats to determine whether bradykinin alters the responsiveness of individual neurons to capsaicin and protons. An increase in the concentration of free intracellular Ca2+ was used as a measure of a response to capsaicin or low pH. Pretreatment with bradykinin (30 nM) increased the proportion of "intermediate-size" (240-320 microm2) dorsal root ganglion neurons that responded to capsaicin (100 nM) or low pH (6.1). However, among "small-size" (160-239 microm2) neurons, bradykinin increased the proportion of neurons that responded to low pH (6.1) but not to capsaicin (10 or 100 nM). Because treatment with arachidonic acid (10 microM) did not mimic the effect of bradykinin and inhibition of cyclo-oxygenase and lipoxygenase with 5,8,11,14-eicosatetraynoic acid (10 microM) did not inhibit the effect of bradykinin on the response to capsaicin, it is not likely that the bradykinin-induced enhancement of neuronal responsiveness is mediated by arachidonic acid or its metabolites in this model. These results support the hypothesis that bradykinin sensitizes primary afferent neurons to other chemicals such as protons that are present in inflamed tissue, particularly by recruiting additional sensory neurons to respond to a given chemical stimulus. An increase in the number of responsive nociceptors that innervate inflamed tissue would contribute to hyperalgesia via spatial summation on spinal neurons in the pathway for pain. Furthermore, since bradykinin enhanced the responsiveness of small-size neurons that responded to protons but not to capsaicin, these data suggest that bradykinin-induced sensitization to protons and capsaicin occur by different mechanisms.  相似文献   

11.
Following dorsal root crush, the lesioned axons regenerate in the peripheral compartment of the dorsal root, but stop at the boundary between the peripheral and the central nervous system, the dorsal root transitional zone. We have previously shown that fibres from human fetal dorsal root ganglia grafted to adult rat hosts are able to grow into the spinal cord, but were not able to specify the route taken by the ingrowing fibres. In this study we have challenged the dorsal root transitional zone astrocyte boundary with human dorsal root ganglion transplants from 5-8-week-old embryos. By tracing immunolabelled human fibres in serial sections, we found that fibres consistently grow around the dorsal root transitional zone astrocytes in laminin-rich peripheral surroundings, and extend into the host rat spinal cord along blood vessels, either into deep or superficial laminae of the dorsal horn, or into the dorsal funiculus. Human fibres that did not have access to blood vessels grew on the spinal cord surface. These findings indicate, that in spite of a substantial growth capacity by axons from human embryonic dorsal root ganglion cells as well as their tolerance to non-permissive factors in the mature mammalian CNS, these axons are still sensitive to the repellent effects of astrocytes of the mature dorsal root transitional zone. Furthermore, this axonal ingrowth is consistently associated with laminin-expressing structures until the axons reach the host spinal cord.  相似文献   

12.
ATP P2x receptors and sensory synaptic transmission between primary afferent fibers and spinal dorsal horn neurons in rats. J. Neurophysiol. 80: 3356-3360, 1998. Glutamate is a major fast transmitter between primary afferent fibers and dorsal horn neurons in the spinal cord. Recent evidence indicates that ATP acts as another fast transmitter at the rat cervical spinal cord and is proposed to serve as a transmitter for nociception and pain. Sensory synaptic transmission between dorsal root afferent fibers and neurons in the superficial dorsal horn of the lumbar spinal cord were examined by whole cell patch-clamp recording techniques. Experiments were designed to test if ATP could serve as a transmitter at the lumbar spinal cord. Monosynaptic excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) were completely abolished after the blockade of both glutamatergic alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid/kainate and N-methyl--aspartate receptors. No residual current was detected, indicating that glutamate but not ATP is a fast transmitter at the dorsal horn of the lumbar spinal cord. Pyridoxal-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulfonic acid (PPADS), a selective P2x receptor antagonist, produced an inhibitory modulatory effect on fast EPSCs and altered responses to paired-pulse stimulation, suggesting the involvement of a presynaptic mechanism. Intrathecal administration of PPADS did not produce any antinociceptive effect in two different types of behavioral nociceptive tests. The present results suggest that ATP P2x2 receptors modulate excitatory synaptic transmission in the superficial dorsal horn of the lumbar spinal cord by a presynaptic mechanism, and such a mechanism does not play an important role in behavioral responses to noxious heating. The involvement of other P2x subtype receptors, which is are less sensitive to PPADS, in acute nociceptive modulation and persistent pain remains to be investigated.  相似文献   

13.
Pituitary adenylate cyclase activating peptide (PACAP) is expressed in a population of capsaicin-sensitive primary sensory neurons of small to medium size in the rat. In the present report we have examined the effect of sciatic nerve injury (unilateral transection) on PACAP expression (immunocytochemistry, radioimmunoassay, in situ hybridization and northern blot analysis) in dorsal root ganglia at the lumbar level and on immunoreactive PACAP in the spinal cord and in the sciatic nerve stump. For comparison, calcitonin gene-related peptide was examined. In dorsal root ganglia of the intact side immunoreactive PACAP and PACAP messenger RNA were localised to a population of nerve cell bodies of small to medium size. In dorsal root ganglia on the injured side, PACAP-immunoreactive nerve cell bodies were more numerous and PACAP messenger RNA was considerably more abundant as studied 14 days after sciatic nerve transection. By contrast, calcitonin gene-related peptide-containing nerve cell bodies were numerous and rich in calcitonin gene-related peptide messenger RNA in dorsal root ganglia on the intact side, while after transection both the number of immunoreactive nerve cell bodies and their content of messenger RNA were markedly reduced. There were indications of axotomy-induced expression of PACAP messenger RNA in larger neurons. In the dorsal horn of the spinal cord on the intact side PACAP and calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive fibres were densely accumulated in the superficial layers. On the transected side the densities of both PACAP and calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive nerve fibres were reduced in the medial part. The data obtained indicate a marked up-regulation of PACAP in sensory neurons following peripheral nerve injury. Since PACAP depresses a C-fibre evoked flexion reflex, this may have implications for sensory transmission. Further, in view of the known promoting effects of PACAP on neuronal survival and differentiation and non-neuronal cell growth as well as its proinflammatory effects a role of PACAP in the neuronal and periaxonal tissue restoration after injury is not inconceivable.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Recent studies show that neuropeptide Y acts indirectly, via release of a neurotrophic factor(s) from the spinal cord, to increase the neurite outgrowth of dissociated adult rat dorsal root ganglion cells. This study examines further the neuropeptide Y-induced increase in neurite outgrowth. To characterize the factor(s) mediating the neuropeptide Y-induced increase in neurite outgrowth, we have examined whether antisera to either nerve growth factor or neurotrophin-3 influence the neuropeptide Y-induced increase in neurite outgrowth. Spinal cord slices were incubated with media alone or in combination with 10 nM neuropeptide Y for 2 h at 37 degrees C. The supernatant of spinal cord incubated with neuropeptide Y significantly enhanced the neurite outgrowth of normal dorsal root ganglion cells. Antiserum against nerve growth factor had no effect on the trophic actions of the supernatant. Antiserum against neurotrophin-3, however, significantly attenuated the increase in neurite outgrowth. Consistent with this finding, neurotrophin-3 also increased the percentage of cells with neurites. Transganglionic labelling of A-fibres with choleragenoid-horseradish peroxidase in animals treated intrathecally with neurotrophin-3 for 14 days via an osmotic pump showed that the area of choleragenoid-horseradish peroxidase label expanded into lamina II. In comparison, saline-treated animals had no label in lamina II. In addition, neurotrophin-3-treated animals also had a significant decrease in mechanical nociceptive threshold. The results suggest that neuropeptide Y acts via neurotrophin-3 to mediate an increase in neurite outgrowth of dorsal root ganglion cells. These results have important implications for the mechanisms underlying neuropathic pain.  相似文献   

16.
Sensory ganglia (trigeminal, jugular, nodose, cervical and lumbar dorsal root ganglia) of the guinea-pig were investigated for the presence of a constitutive carbon monoxide-generating enzyme, heme oxygenase-2 (HO-2). A 36-kDa HO-2 immunoreactive protein was identified by Western blotting in protein extracts from dorsal root ganglia and localized by immunohistochemistry to all neuronal perikarya, including both substance P-positive and substance P-negative neurons, in all ganglia investigated. This ubiquitous distribution points to a general requirement for HO-2 in primary afferent neurons rather than to an association with a specific functionally defined subpopulation. Neither the axons of the sensory neurons nor their peripheral terminals in the skin and around visceral arteries were HO-2 immunoreactive. Explants of dorsal root ganglia with crushes placed on the dorsal roots showed accumulation of the neuropeptide, substance P, at the ganglionic side of the crush, but these axons were non-reactive to HO-2, indicating that there is no substantial transport of HO-2 towards the central ending of these sensory neurons. Collectively, the findings suggest that HO-2 exerts it major effects within the sensory ganglia themselves.  相似文献   

17.
After spinal cord injury, hyper-reflexia can lead to episodic hypertension, muscle spasticity and urinary bladder dyssynergia. This condition may be caused by primary afferent fiber sprouting providing new input to partially denervated spinal interneurons, autonomic neurons and motor neurons. However, conflicting reports concerning afferent neurite sprouting after cord injury do not provide adequate information to associate sprouting with hyper-reflexia. Therefore, we studied the effect of mid-thoracic spinal cord transection on central projections of sensory neurons, quantified by area measurements. The area of myelinated afferent arbors, immunolabeled by cholera toxin B, was greater in laminae I-V in lumbar, but not thoracic cord, by one week after cord transection. Changes in small sensory neurons and their unmyelinated fibers, immunolabeled for calcitonin gene-related peptide, were assessed in the cord and in dorsal root ganglia. The area of calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive fibers in laminae III-V increased in all cord segments at two weeks after cord transection, but not at one week. Numbers of sensory neurons immunoreactive for calcitonin gene-related peptide were unchanged, suggesting that the increased area of immunoreactivity reflected sprouting rather than peptide up-regulation. Immunoreactive fibers in the lateral horn increased only above the lesion and in lumbar segments at two weeks after cord transection. They were not continuous with dorsal horn fibers, suggesting that they were not primary afferent fibers. Using the fluorescent tracer DiI to label afferent fibers, an increase in area could be seen in Clarke's nucleus caudal to the injury two weeks after transection. In conclusion, site- and time-dependent sprouting of myelinated and unmyelinated primary afferent fibers, and possibly interneurons, occurred after spinal cord transection. Afferent fiber sprouting did not reach autonomic or motor neurons directly, but may cause hyper-reflexia by increasing inputs to interneurons.  相似文献   

18.
The method of transneuronal retrograde transport of the Bartha strain of the swine alpha-herpes virus, pseudorabies virus, was used to identify putative interneurons presynaptic to motoneurons that supply a tail-flick muscle in the rat. We also investigated whether these interneurons also contribute to ascending somatosensory pathways. Two to five days after injection of pseudorabies virus into the left abductor caudae dorsalis muscle, and cholera toxin B into the right somatosensory thalamus and midbrain, rats were perfused and spinal cord sections processed immunohistochemically in a two-step procedure to stain cholera toxin B-immunoreactive cells black and pseudorabies virus-immunoreactive cells brown. At short (two-day) survivals, the first spinal neurons to be pseudorabies virus-immunoreactive were in the ipsilateral abductor caudae dorsalis motoneuron pool (S3-S4) and intermediolateral cell column (T12-L2), with a few (0 to five/section) bilaterally in the intermediate zone and around the central canal (all lumbosacral levels). With longer (three- to four-day) survival, more cells were noted (20-50/section) bilaterally (ipsilateral preponderance) in the dorsal and ventral horns of the lumbosacral cord. Many were in lamina I (marginal layer), while few were in lamina II (substantia gelatinosa). At four- and five-day survivals, the numbers of cells increased (20 to 100/section) bilaterally and now included lamina II. The fact that unilateral rhizotomy at L4-Co1 failed to change the distribution of spinal pseudorabies virus labeling suggests that the labeling was due to retrograde transport via the ventral root. In support, bilateral removal of the lumbar sympathetic ganglia, which receive their preganglionic innervation through the ventral root, reduced pseudorabies virus immunoreactivity throughout the thoracic and rostral lumbar spinal cord. These data indicate that there are (i) direct projections from intermediate and dorsal horn cells to abductor caudae dorsalis motoneurons, and (ii) disynaptic connections from dorsal horn (possibly including lamina II) cells to more ventral last-order interneurons. We also suggest that some lamina II cells are presynaptic to lamina I cells that project directly to abductor caudae dorsalis motoneurons. We observed cholera toxin B-immunoreactive cells (five to 20/section) in the expected locations (contralateral lamina I, deep dorsal horn and intermediate zone; lateral spinal nucleus bilaterally). Double-labeled (i.e. pseudorabies virus- and cholera toxin B-immunoreactive) neurons were only occasionally seen in the lateral spinal nucleus and were absent in the spinal gray matter, indicating that segmental interneurons do not collateralize in long ascending sensory pathways to the midbrain and somatosensory thalamus.  相似文献   

19.
Calcitonin gene-related peptide in sensory primary afferent neurons has an excitatory effect on postsynaptic neurons and potentiates the effect of substance P in the rat spinal dorsal horn. It has been established that calcitonin gene-related peptide expression in dorsal root ganglion neurons is depressed, and the effect of calcitonin gene-related peptide on dorsal horn neurons is attenuated, following peripheral nerve injury. We report here that a subpopulation of injured dorsal root ganglion neurons show increased expression of calcitonin gene-related peptide. Using in situ hybridization and the retrograde tracer, FluoroGold, we detected an increased number of medium- to large-sized rat dorsal root ganglion neurons projecting to the gracile nucleus that expressed alpha-calcitonin gene-related peptide messenger RNA following spinal nerve transection. Immunohistochemistry revealed a significant increase in calcitonin gene-related peptide immunoreactivity in the gracile nucleus and in laminae III-IV of the spinal dorsal horn. These results indicate that a subpopulation of dorsal root ganglion neurons express alpha-calcitonin gene-related peptide messenger RNA in response to peripheral nerve injury, and transport this peptide to the gracile nucleus and to laminae III-IV of the spinal dorsal horn. The increase of the excitatory neuropeptide, calcitonin gene-related peptide, in sites of primary afferent termination may affect the excitability of postsynaptic neurons, and have a role in neuronal plasticity following peripheral nerve injury.  相似文献   

20.
Injury of a peripheral nerve gives rise to adaptive functional and structural alterations in spinal neurons. We report that the rearrangement of the spinal circuitry in response to sciatic nerve transection in adult rats involves a delayed mode of degeneration of lumbar spinal cord neurons. Nuclear fragmentation was detected by the TUNEL technique 7 days after sciatic neurectomy but not after 3 or 14 days. Dying cells were preferentially located in the ipsilateral superficial dorsal horn and expressed the neuronal cytoskeletal marker SMI-31. Degeneration was prevented by continuous systemic treatment with the NMDA receptor-antagonist MK-801. These data are supportive that apoptosis is induced in spinal neurons in a transsynaptic manner by an early signal from injured afferent fibres via activation of spinal NMDA receptors.  相似文献   

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