KOR

e-Article

TSP4 protein in spinal cord injury‐induced changes in nociception
Document Type
article
Source
European Journal of Pain. 17(10)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Clinical Sciences
Traumatic Head and Spine Injury
Chronic Pain
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
Pain Research
Peripheral Neuropathy
Spinal Cord Injury
Neurodegenerative
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Neurological
Animals
Female
Molecular Sequence Data
Motor Activity
Neuralgia
Nociception
Pain Measurement
Rats
Rats
Sprague-Dawley
Recovery of Function
Reflex
Abnormal
Spinal Cord Injuries
Thrombospondins
Up-Regulation
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Anesthesiology
Clinical sciences
Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundOur previous data have indicated that nerve injury-induced up-regulation of thrombospondin-4 (TSP4) proteins in dorsal spinal cord plays a causal role in neuropathic pain state development in a spinal nerve ligation model. To investigate whether TSP4 proteins also contribute to the development of centrally mediated changes in nociception after spinal cord injury (SCI), we investigated whether SCI induced TSP4 dysregulation, and if so, whether this change correlated with changes in nociception in a T9 spinal cord contusion injury model.MethodsBehavioural sensitivity to mechanical, thermal stimuli and locomotor function recovery were tested blindly in SCI or sham rats post-injury. Intrathecal antisense or mismatch control oligodeoxynucleotides were used to treat SCI rats with nociceptive hyperreflexia, and Western blots were used to measure TSP4 protein levels in dorsal spinal cord samples.ResultsSCI induced below-level hindpaw hypersensitivity to stimuli. TSP4 protein levels are up-regulated in dorsal spinal cord of SCI rats with nociceptive hyperreflexia, but not in SCI rats without nociceptive hyperreflexia. There was no significant difference in motor function recovery post-injury between SCI rats with or without nociceptive hyperreflexia. Intrathecal treatment with TSP4 antisense, but not mismatch control, oligodeoxynucleotides led to reversal of injury-induced TSP4 up-regulation and nociceptive hyperreflexia in SCI rats.ConclusionsSCI leads to TSP4 up-regulation in lumbar spinal cord that may play a critical role in mediating centrally mediated behavioural hypersensitivity. Blocking this pathway may be helpful in management of SCI-induced changes in nociception.