|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Impaired nociception and peripheral opioid antinociception in mice lacking both kinin B1 and B2 receptors.

First Author  Cayla C Year  2012
Journal  Anesthesiology Volume  116
Issue  2 Pages  448-57
PubMed ID  22273860 Mgi Jnum  J:316589
Mgi Id  MGI:6836825 Doi  10.1097/ALN.0b013e318242b2ea
Citation  Cayla C, et al. (2012) Impaired nociception and peripheral opioid antinociception in mice lacking both kinin B1 and B2 receptors. Anesthesiology 116(2):448-57
abstractText  BACKGROUND: Kinins (e.g., bradykinin) acting through the constitutively expressed B2 and the injury-induced B1 receptors are involved in pain and hyperalgesia, as previously shown by use of receptor-selective antagonists and single-receptor knockout models. Because the overall contribution of kinins to painful processes remains unclear, the aim of this study was to analyze pain-related behaviors of mice unable to respond to kinins because of a lack of both B1 and B2 receptors. METHODS: In knockout mice lacking both B1 and B2 receptors and in wild-type mice (n = 8-21 per group) the authors assessed nociceptive thresholds to mechanical and heat stimuli (von Frey and Hargreaves tests, respectively) in healthy animals and after induction of inflammatory and neuropathic pain, acid-induced visceral nociception, and modulation of nociceptive responses by peripherally administered opioid agonists. RESULTS: In knockout mice lacking both B1 and B2 receptors baseline nociceptive responses to heat were unaltered, nocifensive responses to bradykinin were abolished, acute acetic acid-induced visceral nociception was reduced by approximately 70% (mean difference: 19.5 writhes/30 min) and heat hypersensitivity in carrageenan-induced paw inflammation was decreased 48 h after injection (mean difference 2.88 s), hypersensitivities in chronic complete Freund's adjuvant-induced paw inflammation or after chronic constriction injury of the sciatic nerve were unchanged, and peripheral mu- and delta-opioid-induced analgesia after chronic constriction injury was reduced by 30-35% (mean differences: mu-agonist: 0.495 g, delta-agonist: 0.555 g). CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that kinins are important for nociception associated with acute short-lasting inflammation but are less essential in chronic stages of pain. The results also highlight a new protective function of kinins via interactions with the opioid system.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

5 Bio Entities

0 Expression