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The Journal of Neuroscience, September 29, 2004, 24(39):8494-8499; doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2982-04.2004

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Neurobiology of Disease
Spinal Dorsal Horn Calcium Channel {alpha}2{delta}-1 Subunit Upregulation Contributes to Peripheral Nerve Injury-Induced Tactile Allodynia

Chun-Ying Li,1 Yan-Hua Song,3 Emiliano S. Higuera,3 and Z. David Luo1,2

Departments of 1Anesthesiology and 2Pharmacology, College of Medicine, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California 92717, and 3Department of Anesthesiology, School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093

Peripheral nerve injury induces upregulation of the calcium channel {alpha}2{delta}-1 structural subunit in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and dorsal spinal cord of spinal nerve-ligated rats with neuropathic pain, suggesting a role of the calcium channel {alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit in central sensitization. To investigate whether spinal dorsal horn {alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit upregulation derives from increased DRG {alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit and plays a causal role in neuropathic pain development, we examined spinal dorsal horn{alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit expression with or without dorsal rhizotomy in spinal nerve-ligated rats and its correlation with tactile allodynia, a neuropathic pain state defined as reduced thresholds to non-noxious tactile stimulation. We also examined the effects of intrathecal {alpha}2{delta}-1 antisense oligonucleotides on {alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit expression and neuropathic allodynia in the nerve-ligated rats. Our data indicated that spinal nerve injury resulted in time-dependent{alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit upregulation in the spinal dorsal horn that correlated temporally with neuropathic allodynia development and maintenance. Dorsal rhizotomy diminished basal level expression and blocked injury-induced expression of the spinal dorsal horn{alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit and reversed injury-induced tactile allodynia. In addition, intrathecal {alpha}2{delta}-1 antisense oligonucleotides blocked injury-induced dorsal horn {alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit upregulation and diminished tactile allodynia. These findings indicate that {alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit basal expression occurs presynaptically and postsynaptically in spinal dorsal horn. Nerve injury induces mainly presynaptic {alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit expression that derives from increased {alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit in injured DRG neurons. Thus, changes in presynaptic {alpha}2{delta}-1 subunit expression contribute to injury-induced spinal neuroplasticity and central sensitization that underlies neuropathic pain development and maintenance.

Key words: central sensitization; spinal cord; allodynia; neuropathic pain; nerve injury; calcium channels


Received July 21, 2004; revised August 17, 2004; accepted August 19, 2004.




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