Palmitoylethanolamide-Mediated Inhibition of Nogo-a Signaling Attenuates Pain in Sickle Mice

Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 15-16
Author(s):  
Donovan A Argueta ◽  
Hanan Chweih ◽  
Bryant Avalos ◽  
Huy Tran ◽  
Aithanh Nguyen ◽  
...  

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is characterized by multiple comorbidities including pain. SCD patients often use cannabinoids to alleviate pain, but their psychoactive effects and social stigma impose major challenges. Strategies to elevate endogenous cannabinoids (eCBs) are devoid of such challenges, but pharmacologic approaches showed adverse-effects in clinical trials. Therefore, we examined the potential of non-pharmacologic integrative approaches to elevate eCBs. Enriched high-energy diet has been shown to increase levels of eCBs (Argueta et al., Front Physiol 2019) and when combined with companionship reduced hyperalgesia in sickle mice (Tran et al., Blood 2016). We hypothesized that enriched diet and companionship would enhance eCBs without adverse effects and reduce hyperalgesia by inhibiting peripheral and central pro-nociceptive mechanisms. We fed male homozygous-BERK (sickle) mice, regular Rodent Diet (RD; 2018, Harlan) or customized high calorie enriched Sickle Mouse Diet (SD; 59M3, TestDiet), housed with or without a female companion (C+ or C-, respectively) for 3-weeks. RD/SD contain 18.6/26.4% protein, 6.2/11.1% fat, 24/27.5% carbohydrates and 18/26% kcal/g, respectively; and SD contains higher minerals, vitamins and ω-3 fatty acids compared to RD. Control HbAA-BERK and sickle mice were divided into 4 groups: [i] R/C-, RD, no companion, [ii] S/C-, SD without companion, [iii] R/C+, RD with companion, and [iv] S/C+, SD with companion. After 3-weeks of treatment, spinal cord eCBs were analyzed using targeted lipid quantitation with liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LCMS). We observed a 20% decrease in palmitoylethanolamide (PEA), in sickle mice compared to control mice, in R/C- group (p<0.05). Further, we observed increased spinal PEA in S/C+ compared to R/C- sickle mice (~40%, p<0.05), which was concomitant with reduced mechanical, heat, and cold hyperalgesia in S/C+ sickle mice group (~80%, p<0.001; ~60%, p<0.01; & ~30%, p<0.001, respectively). Therefore, sickle diet and companionship enhances endogenous spinal PEA which has an inhibitory effect on hyperalgesia in sickle mice. Treatment of control and sickle mice in R/C- group with PEA (i.p. 20 mg/kg/day) led to acute (1 hour) reduction of mechanical- (~40%, p<0.01) and cold-hyperalgesia (~40%, p<0.001) in sickle mice compared to pre-treatment, which was sustained during 3 day treatment, but had no effect on control mice which do not have hyperalgesia. PEA inhibits substance P (SP)-induced mast cell activity, and sickle mice show increased spinal SP, neuronal sensitization, peripheral nerve injury and mast cell activation (Tran et al., Blood 2017). Pain in SCD is both neuropathic and inflammatory. We examined if PEA inhibited the mechanisms that underlie spinal nerve repair by neurite outgrowth inhibitor, NOGO-A/reticulon-4, which regulates nerve regeneration via Rho Kinase (ROCK) signaling. NOGO-A contributes to inflammatory pain and hyperalgesia following spinal cord injury via NOGO receptor 1 in spinal cord. We observed that spinal NOGO-A expression and ROCK activity are upregulated (20% & 100%, respectively) in sickle mice compared to control mice (all R/C-), which were inhibited upon 3-day treatment with PEA. We validated ROCK activity downstream of NOGO-A using SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells, simulating a sickle microenvironment with hemin (40 µM) and TNFα (1 ng/ml)(H+T). ROCK activity increased in H+T-treated SH-SY5Y cells compared to vehicle (~30%, p=0.05). In parallel, we analyzed the effect of PEA on extracellular traps (ET) in cutaneous mast cells from sickle mice induced by H+T in vitro. PEA treatment inhibited ET formation and extravasation of nuclear contents in H+T induced mast cells. Thus, PEA has the potential to attenuate neuropathic and inflammatory pain by inhibiting neuronal NOGO-A/ROCK pathway and mast cell activation in a sickle milieu. PEA has analgesic and anti-inflammatory effects on chronic pain in several clinical conditions. Therefore, our data suggest that diet and pleasure have the potential to upregulate pro-analgesic PEA that inhibits NOGO-A signaling and mast cell activation, leading to attenuation of hyperalgesia in sickle mice. Disclosures Gupta: Grifols: Research Funding; Cyclerion: Research Funding; 1910 Genetics: Research Funding; Novartis: Honoraria; Tautona Group: Honoraria; CSL Behring: Honoraria.

Pain ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 158 (7) ◽  
pp. 1314-1322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas M. Lopes ◽  
Franziska Denk ◽  
Kim I. Chisholm ◽  
Tesha Suddason ◽  
Camille Durrieux ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 2169-2169
Author(s):  
Ying Wang ◽  
Jianxun Lei ◽  
Yann Y Lamarre ◽  
Ritu Jha ◽  
Fei Peng ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Inflammation, neurogenic inflammation and pain remain challenging to treat in sickle cell disease (SCD). Alternative therapies including acupuncture have been used for centuries to reduce pain and ameliorate underlying pathobiology of many disorders. We examined the mechanisms underlying acupuncture therapy in sickle mice. To prevent the influence of anesthetics and constraint on the pathobiology we developed electroacupuncture (EA) treatment for awake/conscious freely moving mice to simulate treatment conditions in patients, and then examined the peripheral and central mechanisms of neuroinflammation and nociception. Methods: HbSS-BERK sickle and HbAA-BERK control mice were treated with four EA treatments (every 3rd day, frequency: 4 or 10 Hz, pulse width: 100 microsecond, duration: 30 min) at acupoint GB30. Untreated and sham-EA treated (acupuncture without electrical stimulation) were used as controls. Hyperalgesia was evaluated daily by determining mechanical threshold, deep tissue hyperalgesia and thermal hyperalgesia using von Frey filaments, grip force, and cold plate, respectively. Blood and tissues were collected for analysis after four sessions of treatment. Skin biopsies were incubated overnight and culture medium was analyzed for mast cell activation marker tryptase, and neuromodulatory marker substance P. Results: Varied analgesic response to EA treatment was observed in sickle mice. About 86% treated mice equally showed positive (>50% pain relief) or moderate (20-30% pain relief) response and 14% were non-responsive (<20% pain relief) to EA. In positive responders, EA significantly reduced white blood cells (p<.001 Vs moderate- and non-responders), serum amyloid protein (p<.01 Vs untreated), IL-1beta (p<.05 Vs untreated, p<.01 Vs non-responders), and substance P (p<.05 Vs untreated and p<.001 Vs non-responders and p<.05 Vs moderate-responders). Concurrently, spinal cord analysis of EA treated positive-responders showed reduced substance P (p<.05 Vs untreated and non-responders), IL-1 beta (p<.01 Vs untreated), TNF alpha (p<.05 and p<.01 Vs moderate- and non-responders, respectively). Consistent with this central and peripheral anti-inflammatory response, culture medium from skin biopsies of positive responders demonstrated reduced substance P (p<.01 Vs moderate- and non-responders) and tryptase (p<.01 Vs untreated, moderate- and non-responders), and significantly less toluidine blue stained degranulating mast cells in the skin (p<.05 Vs untreated and non-responders) suggestive of attenuation of mast cell and peripheral nervous system activation. Functionally, capsaicin and substance P-induced neurogenic inflammation were significantly attenuated in positive-responders vs non-responders (p<.05) or untreated (p<.05). Peripheral and central attenuation of inflammatory and neurogenic response to EA was accompanied by inhibition of nociceptive signaling in the spinal cord. Spinal phosphorylation of p38 MAPK decreased in EA treated mice (p<.05 Vs sham-EA and untreated control; and positive-responders Vs non-responders). Conclusions: EA treatment on conscious free-moving mice simulates clinical conditions in patients and excludes the potential influence due to restraint or anesthetics. EA leads to peripheral and central neuromodulation and anti-inflammatory response by attenuating mast cell activation, substance P, and cytokine release in the periphery and by abrogating spinal nociceptive signaling of p38MAPK and inflammation. Together, these molecular and cellular effects lead to EA-induced attenuation of neurogenic inflammation and hyperalgesia in sickle mice. Importantly, these data explain the cause of variable effectiveness of EA in SCD. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 278-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianxun Lei ◽  
Ying Wang ◽  
Jinny Paul ◽  
Susan Thompson ◽  
Ritu Jha ◽  
...  

Abstract Sickle cell disease (SCD) is characterized by chronic hemolysis, inflammation, vascular dysfunction, and pain. Earlier we showed that mast cell activation contributes to neuroinflammation and pain and is accompanied by increased toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) expression on mast cells (Vincent et al., Blood 2013), and that genetic deletion of TLR4 ameliorates neurogenic inflammation and hyperalgesia in HbSS-BERK sickle mice. Several other studies have shown increased TLR4 expression in peripheral system and its involvement in sickle pathobiology. We propose that free heme, due to hemolysis, activates TLR4 in the central nervous system in addition to peripheral activation, which further exacerbates neuroinflammation and hyperalgesia. Spinal cords of HbSS-BERK sickle mice show 3-fold mRNA transcripts for TLR4 and a 2-fold increase in hemin as compared to the spinal cords of HbAA-BERK control mice. Therefore, targeting TLR4 with pharmacological inhibitors may provide a therapeutic approach to attenuate peripheral and central inflammation and hyperalgesia. In the present study we examined the potential of pharmacological inhibition of mast cell activation, neuroinflammation and hyperalgesia in HbSS-BERK sickle mice with TLR4 inhibitor, TAK242. Sickle mice were administrated intravenously with TLR4 inhibitor TAK242 (1 mg/kg body weight/day) for 5 days. Sensory testing was performed at baseline at recruitment and periodically during the 5-day treatment and for another 8 days after concluding the treatment to evaluate mechanical hyperalgesia with von Frey filaments, thermal hyperalgesia in response to heat/cold and grip force for musculoskeletal/deep tissue hyperalgesia. Following the 5-day treatment with TAK242, release of cytokines, tryptase (marker of mast cell activation) and substance P released from skin biopsies and spinal cords were analyzed by ELISA. TAK242 significantly decreased the release of tryptase (TAK242: 5.178 ± 0.7613 pg/ml vs vehicle: 8.801 ± 0.9403 pg/ml, p = 0.0181), substance P (TAK242: 11.56 ± 1.945 pg/ml vs vehicle: 25.51 ± 4.283 pg/ml, p = 0.018), and IL-6 (TAK242: 15.59 ± 0.4541 pg/ml vs vehicle: 29.74 ± 0.8249 pg/ml, p = 0.0045) from skin biopsies, suggesting that TAK242 reduced SCD-induced mast cell activation and inflammation. TAK242 also significantly decreased substance P (TAK242: 0.7198 ± 0.0587 pg/mg vs vehicle: 0.931 ± 0.0676 pg/mg, p = 0.0462) and phosphorylation of p38/MAPK (p = 0.0184) in the spinal cord, as well as dorsal cutaneous blood flow (TAK242: 6.392 ± 0.3857 PU vs vehicle: 12.32 ± 0.5575 PU, p < 0.0001), indicating that TAK242 ameliorated SCD-evoked central and peripheral activation of inflammation and nociceptive mechanisms. Furthermore, TAK242 administration gradually reduced the mechanical, deep tissue, and thermal hyperalgesia upto 5-day treatment (p < 0.01, vs vehicle HbSS). However, discontinuation of treatment led to a gradual increase in hyperalgesia observed upto day-8 post-treatment. TAK242 also significantly decreased acute pain induced by hypoxia/reoxygenation and accelerated recovery from injury of hypoxia/reoxygenation. These data reveal the significant therapeutic effect of pharmacological inhibition of TLR4 on inflammation and hyperalgesia in sickle mice. Therapies targeting TLR4 inhibition may be potentially beneficial in ameliorating sickle pathobiology and pain. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
pp. 135910532110145
Author(s):  
Jennifer Nicoloro SantaBarbara ◽  
Marci Lobel

Individuals with Mast Cell Activation Syndrome (MCAS), a rare chronic disease, experience unpredictable physical symptoms and diagnostic challenges resulting in poor emotional states. The prevalence and correlates of depressive symptoms were examined among 125 participants who completed the CES-D and relevant instruments. The majority reported a clinically-significant level of depression which was especially common among younger participants and those who reported greater loneliness or more disease-specific stressors. Greater magnitude of depressive symptoms was associated with greater illness intrusiveness, less social support, and lower optimism. Results highlight the value of interventions targeting loneliness and stressors unique to this population.


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