Sigma-1 receptors control immune-driven peripheral opioid analgesia during inflammation in mice
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Tejada, Miguel Angel; Montilla-García, Angeles; Cronin, Shane J; Cikes, Domagoj; Sanchez-Fernandez, Cristina; Gonzalez-Cano, Rafael; Ruiz-Cantero, Maria del Carmen; Penninger, Josef M; Vela, Jose Miguel; Baeyens, Jose Manuel; Cobos, Enrique JoseEditorial
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS)
Materia
endogenous opioid peptides immune cells inflammatory pain sigma-1 receptors
Fecha
2017-08-01Referencia bibliográfica
Sigma-1 receptors control immune-driven peripheral opioid analgesia during inflammation in mice. Tejada MA, Montilla-García A, Cronin SJ, Cikes D, Sánchez-Fernández C, González-Cano R, Ruiz-Cantero MC, Penninger JM, Vela JM, Baeyens JM, Cobos EJ. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Aug 1;114(31):8396-8401. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1620068114. Epub 2017 Jul 17.
Resumen
Sigma-1 antagonism potentiates the antinociceptive effects of opioid drugs, so sigma-1 receptors constitute a biological brake to opioid drug-induced analgesia. The pathophysiological role of this process is unknown. We aimed to investigate whether sigma-1 antagonism reduces inflammatory pain through the disinhibition of the endogenous opioidergic system in mice. The selective sigma-1 antagonists BD-1063 and S1RA abolished mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia in mice with carrageenan-induced acute (3 h) inflammation. Sigma-1-mediated antihyperalgesia was reversed by the opioid antagonists naloxone and naloxone methiodide (a peripherally restricted naloxone analog) and by local administration at the inflamed site of monoclonal antibody 3-E7, which recognizes the pan-opioid sequence Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe at the N terminus of most endogenous opioid peptides (EOPs). Neutrophils expressed pro-opiomelanocortin, the precursor of β-endorphin (a known EOP), and constituted the majority of the acute immune infiltrate. β-endorphin levels increased in the inflamed paw, and this increase and the antihyperalgesic effects of sigma-1 antagonism were abolished by reducing the neutrophil load with in vivo administration of an anti-Ly6G antibody. The opioid-dependent sigma-1 antihyperalgesic effects were preserved 5 d after carrageenan administration, where macrophages/monocytes were found to express pro-opiomelanocortin and to now constitute the majority of the immune infiltrate. These results suggest that immune cells harboring EOPs are needed for the antihyperalgesic effects of sigma-1 antagonism during inflammation. In conclusion, sigma-1 receptors curtail immune-driven peripheral opioid analgesia, and sigma-1 antagonism produces local opioid analgesia by enhancing the action of EOPs of immune origin, maximizing the analgesic potential of immune cells that naturally accumulate in painful inflamed areas.