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The Journal of Neuroscience, February 15, 2002, 22(4):1363-1372
A Role of the Ubiquitin-Proteasome System in Neuropathic
Pain
Andrew
Moss1,
Gordon
Blackburn-Munro1,
Emer M.
Garry1,
James A.
Blakemore1,
Tracey
Dickinson1,
Roberta
Rosie1,
Rory
Mitchell2, and
Susan M.
Fleetwood-Walker1
1 Department of Preclinical Veterinary Sciences, The
Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, The University of Edinburgh,
Summerhall, Edinburgh EH9 1QH, United Kingdom, and
2 Medical Research Council Membrane and Adapter Proteins
Cooperative Group and Membrane Biology Group, Division of Biomedical
and Clinical Laboratory Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh
EH8 9XD, United Kingdom
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ABSTRACT |
Neuropathic pain (characterized by hyperalgesia and allodynia to
mechanical and thermal stimuli) causes cellular changes in spinal
dorsal horn neurons, some of which parallel those in synaptic plasticity associated with learning. Ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase (UCH) appears to play a key role in long-term facilitation in Aplysia. The cooperation of UCH with the proteolytic
enzyme complex known as the proteasome is required for the degradation
of a number of signaling molecules within the cell that may remove
normal restraints on synaptic plasticity. We have used
electrophysiology, in situ hybridization histochemistry,
semiquantitative RT-PCR, Western blotting, and in vivo
behavioral reflex analysis to investigate the ubiquitin-proteasome
system in a model of neuropathic pain. In neuropathic animals,
ionophoretic application of selective proteasome inhibitors attenuated
dorsal horn neuron firing evoked by normally innocuous brush or cold
stimuli and by noxious mustard oil stimuli. In control animals, only
mustard oil-evoked responses were inhibited. Intrathecal administration
of proteasome inhibitors attenuated hyperalgesia and allodynia in
neuropathic rats. Expression of UCH-L1 (a rat homolog of
Aplysia neuronal UCH and of the human UCH-L1, also known
as PGP 9.5) and its mRNA were selectively increased within the
ipsilateral dorsal horn of neuropathic rats, supporting the idea of a
role for the ubiquitin-proteasome system in nociceptive processing.
Proteasome inhibitors selectively attenuate allodynic and hyperalgesic
responses in neuropathic pain, with some reduction in normal
nociceptive, but not non-nociceptive responses, and potentially
represent a novel therapeutic strategy for neuropathic pain.
Key words:
neuropathic pain; spinal cord; proteasome; ubiquitination; hyperalgesia; allodynia
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INTRODUCTION |
After damage to the distal parts of
primary afferent neurons that transmit nociceptive information, their
abnormal and repetitive firing is known to induce a state of neuronal
hyperexcitability within the spinal dorsal horn, referred to as
"central sensitization." A characteristic consequence of this is
the development of accentuated pain-related behaviors, reflecting
hyperalgesia and allodynia in response to thermal and mechanical
stimulation. In animal models of neuropathic pain, these are associated
with various neurochemical and neuroanatomical changes occurring within
the nociceptive pathway itself (Hökfelt et al., 1994 ; Woolf et
al., 1995 ; Chung et al., 1996 ; Cameron et al., 1997 ).
A number of the changes associated with central sensitization in
response to sustained nociceptive activation are similar to those
observed in animal models of synaptic plasticity, such as long-term
potentiation (LTP) in the mammalian hippocampus. Both LTP and central
sensitization trigger activity-dependent changes in neuronal
excitability via mechanisms including the post-translational
modification of membrane-bound proteins such as the NMDA receptor.
Downstream targets common to both processes may include
Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinases, protein
kinase C (PKC), protein kinase A (PKA), and nitric oxide synthase
(Bliss and Collingridge, 1993 ; Mayer et al., 1999 ). A partially
analogous process of long-term facilitation (LTF) of synaptic responses
occurs in Aplysia sensory pathways, where a number of the
molecular changes underlying LTF are evoked in common by sensory neuron
injury (Walters and Ambron, 1995 ). In the LTF model, sustained sensory
neuron activation induces the activation of PKA with the dissociation
of PKA regulatory subunits and the translocation of the constitutively
active free catalytic subunits to the cell nucleus (Chain et al.,
1999 ). The ubiquitin-proteasome system appears to play a vital role in
the regulation of PKA activity by degrading the regulatory subunits of
PKA, which normally maintain PKA in an inactive state. Stimulus-induced degradation of PKA regulatory subunits is thus thought to lead to
persistent activation of the kinase and maintenance of the synapse in a
facilitated state (Greenberg et al., 1987 ; Chain et al., 1999 ).
The ubiquitin-proteasome system is a major non-lysosomal proteolytic
pathway that degrades diverse cellular proteins, including a number of
proteins with important roles in the regulation of cell growth or
function (Coux et al., 1996 ; Rolfe et al., 1997 ; Hershko and
Ciechanover, 1998 ). For example, protein degradation by this pathway is
important for the control of PKA activity (Hegde et al., 1993 ). The
functional activity of the proteasome is enhanced by the UCH family of
isopeptidases, which appear to play a crucial role in maintaining
activity by preventing accumulation of inhibitory polyubiquitin chains
(Wilkinson, 1997 ). The present study explores the contribution made by
the ubiquitin-proteasome system to the central sensitization,
hyperalgesia, and allodynia that characterize intractable neuropathic pain.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Chronic constriction injury to the sciatic nerve
All experiments were performed in accordance with the United
Kingdom Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act, 1986. Adult male Wistar
rats (200-350 gm, Charles River, Kent, UK) were anesthetized with
sodium pentobarbital (Sagatal 0.06 ml/100 gm, i.p.; Rhône Merieux, Essex, UK) and supplemented with
halothane/O2 (Zeneca, Cheshire, UK). Under
aseptic conditions, the right sciatic nerve was exposed proximal to the
trifurcation, at a mid-thigh level, and four chromic cat gut ligatures
(4:0; Ethicon, Edinburgh, UK) were tied to loosely constrict the nerve
[chronic constriction injury (CCI)], as viewed under 40×
magnification (Bennett and Xie, 1988 ). The overlying muscle and skin
were closed with sutures (4:0; Ethicon), and the animals were allowed
to recover for 72 hr before reflex testing recommenced. Sham-operated
animals underwent the same surgical procedure, but no ligatures were
placed around the nerve.
Behavioral tests
Behavioral testing was performed before surgery to establish a
baseline for comparison with post-surgical values. Inspections were
made regularly for signs of autotomy, which was rarely observed. CCI
animals were always assessed for the presence of thermal hyperalgesia, cold, and mechanical allodynia before being used for further study in
other tests. Only in occasional cases did reflex sensitization fail to
develop, and in those examples technical factors appeared to be
responsible. The following behavioral reflex tests were performed as
described in detail previously (Blackburn-Munro et al., 1999 ; Dickinson
et al., 1999 ). Thermal hyperalgesia was monitored using noxious radiant
heat (30-55°C; Hargreaves' thermal device, Linton Instruments,
Diss, UK) applied to the mid-plantar glabrous surface of the hindpaw.
The withdrawal response latency was characterized as a brief paw flick
recorded to the nearest 0.1 sec; a standard cutoff latency of 20 sec
prevented tissue damage.
Mechanical allodynia was measured as the threshold for paw withdrawal
in response to graded mechanical stimuli applied to the mid-plantar
glabrous surface of the hindpaw using calibrated von Frey filaments
(Stoelting, Wood Dale, IL). Threshold was defined as the pressure
(force per unit area) that caused foot withdrawal five times in every
10 applications, repeated at 1-2 sec intervals. The pressure applied
to the hindlimb by the von Frey filaments is calibrated as force
(milliNewtons) divided by the area over which it is applied
(millimeters squared).
To detect the presence of cold allodynia, rats were placed in a perspex
box with an elevated aluminum floor covered with iced water, sufficient
to immerse both glabrous and hairy skin of the hindpaw (3-4°C)
(Bennett and Xie, 1988 ). Once placed in the box, rats were allowed 10 sec to acclimatize. The number of seconds the animal raised its hindpaw
above the water over a 20 sec period was recorded. This was repeated
four times at 10 min intervals to establish a mean suspended paw
elevation time (SPET) for each rat. Animals determined as being at the
peak of neuropathy, 12-14 d after CCI surgery, were then used in the
experiments described below.
Intrathecal drug treatment
The effects of intrathecal administration of the selective
proteasome inhibitors MG-132 (Rock et al., 1994 ) and epoxomicin (Sin et
al., 1999 ) on behavioral reflex responses were examined. Before
determining the effects of these inhibitors, baseline measurements were
recorded in rats [normal (i.e., naive), n = 8;
neuropathic, n = 26] both before and at the peak of
neuropathy. A minimum of four measurements were made for each test
session, for each sensory test. Rats were anesthetized briefly with
halothane/O2 and injected intrathecally at the L5
level of the spinal cord with 5 nmol of MG-132 or 0.75 nmol of
epoxomicin in saline with 0.5% dimethylformamide (50 µl), using a 25 gauge needle microsyringe. Injection of vehicle had no discernable
effect on behavioral reflexes. The identity of the drug was concealed
from the experimenter to eliminate bias, and dye injections (Pontamine
Sky Blue) were performed in separate experiments to define the correct
site of injection. Testing began 15 min after injection (a delay to
allow for full recovery of reflex function after anesthesia) and was
performed at 5 min (thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia) or
10 min intervals (cold allodynia). Testing continued until recovery to
pre-injection values.
Single neuron electrophysiological recording experiments
After induction of anesthesia with
halothane/O2, rats (normal, n = 8; sham, n = 4; neuropathic, n = 11)
underwent jugular vein and tracheal cannulations. Anesthesia was then
maintained using intravenous -chloralose (60 mg/kg) and urethane
(1.2 mg/kg). Supplementary doses of -chloralose were given as
required. Core temperature was maintained at 37-38°C, and
O2 (0.1 l/min) was passed over the end of the
cannula to enrich the inspired air. A laminectomy (segments L3-L6) was
performed, as described previously (Blackburn-Munro and
Fleetwood-Walker, 1997 ). Extracellular recordings were made from
single, multireceptive neurons (laminas III-V), ipsilateral to the
nerve injury in neuropathic animals and bilaterally in unoperated,
naïve control rats via the central barrel (4 M NaCl, pH 4.0-4.5) of a multibarreled glass
microelectrode (tip size 4-5 µm). One side barrel contained 1 M NaCl, pH 4.5, for automatic current balancing
using a Neurophore BH2 Ionophoresis System (Medical Systems
Corporation). The remaining barrels contained drugs for ionophoretic
application of drug: the selective proteasome inhibitors
lactacystin (Fenteany et al., 1995 ) and MG-132 (both in 0.5% aqueous
dimethylformamide, pH 4.5, at concentrations of 500 and 200 µM, respectively; Biomol, Plymouth Meeting,
PA). Drugs were ejected using positive currents of 5-60 nA, and a
retention current of 12 nA was applied to each side barrel when not
in use to minimize drug leakage. The resistance of the side barrels was
monitored regularly, and electrodes with resistance values in excess of
45 M were rejected.
The effects of the inhibitors were examined on evoked responses of
neurons to sensory stimulation in both naive and neuropathic animals.
Sustained activation of neurons was obtained by the following stimuli,
described in detail elsewhere (Dickinson et al., 1999 ): (1) a rotating
motorized innocuous brush for low threshold mechanical stimulation and
(2) an intense cold stimulus provided by a Peltier device [5°C for
10 sec, from 32°C (ramp rate 5°C/sec), over a surface area of 1 cm2; Medical Instruments, Yale University,
New Haven, CT]. The stimuli were repeated every 1-2 min to give
reproducible peaks of activity. (3) Topical application of the
C-fiber-selective chemical algogen, mustard oil [allyl isothiocyanate
(Aldrich Chemical Company), 7.5% solution in paraffin oil, applied up
to seven times at 5 min intervals].
Drugs were ejected ionophoretically in a step-wise manner (usually in
increments of 10 nA, over a range of 5-60 nA) every 1-2 min, until
clear effects on the neuronal firing rate were observed; if none was
observed by 60 nA after 2 min duration, the drug application was
terminated. For the majority of neurons, both drugs were tested on
responses to all three sensory stimuli.
Action potential discrimination enabled data to be digitized and
downloaded onto a computer to give a record of cell firing rate
measured as action potentials per second. After subtraction of the
"background" activity, the firing rate after drug application was
expressed as the percentage change from control responses of the neuron
before drug application.
Determination of levels of mRNA for ubiquitin
C-terminal hydrolase-L1
mRNA analysis by RT-PCR. Relevant segments of spinal
cord were dissected into ipsilateral and contralateral sides and
immersed in liquid nitrogen. Total RNA was extracted using Trizol
(Invitrogen, Paisley, UK) according to the manufacturer's
guidelines. The cDNAs were obtained using SuperScript II Moloney's
murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen)
according to the manufacturer's protocol. Briefly, 5 µg
DNase-treated total RNA was added to reverse transcription buffer (50 mM Tris-Cl, pH 8.3, 75 mM
KCl, 5 mM MgCl2) containing
17 U RNAsin (Invitrogen), 10 mM dNTPs, and 0.5 µM poly(dT)12-18 primer.
Semiquantitative PCR was performed for rat ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase-L1 (UCH-L1)/PGP 9.5 homolog (Wilkinson et al., 1989 ; Kajimoto
et al., 1992 ) and for the metabolic housekeeping enzyme, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphodehydrogenase (GAPDH). An excess of UCH amplification primers (forward: 5'-GCT GCT GCT GTT TCC CCT CAC; reverse: 5'-AGA CCT TGG CGG CAT CCT G) (MWG Biotech) (0.5 µM final concentration), supplemented with 5 U
Taq DNA polymerase (Invitrogen), and 2 µl of the
first-strand reaction mix, were used for each amplification. PCR
cycling conditions were as follows: 1 cycle of 5 min at 94°C, and 22 cycles of 45 sec at 94°C, 30 sec at 56°C, 1 min at 72°C. This
resulted in a linear amplification of the 324 base pair (bp) UCH-L1 DNA
fragment, as quantified by direct measurements of fluorescence of the
amplified fragments using a digital imaging system (UVP) and
Scan-Analysis software (Biosoft). A second round of PCR was performed
in the presence of 3'-NH2-linked GAPDH primers in
an 8:2 molar ratio with standard GAPDH primers: forward, 5'-GGC AGC CCA
GAA CAT CAT CC; reverse, 5'-CAG CCC CAG CAT CAA AGG TG. This produced
levels of fluorescence comparable to the 324 bp UCH-L1 PCR fragment
using PCR conditions identical to those above.
After coamplification of the target UCH-L1 and GAPDH sequences, equal
amounts of reaction products were analyzed by gel electrophoresis in a
2% (w/v) agarose gel containing 0.5 µg/ml ethidium bromide. Relative
levels of UCH-L1 mRNA expression were calculated by expressing relative
levels of UCH-L1 mRNA fluorescence as a percentage of GAPDH mRNA fluorescence.
In situ hybridization histochemistry. Neuropathic
animals and age-matched naïve controls were deeply anesthetized
with halothane/O2 (4% for induction and
maintenance), and a laminectomy (L3-L6) was performed for spinal cord
removal. Tissue was mounted on a cryostat chuck (OCT Embedding Matrix,
CellPath Ltd., Wales, UK) and snap frozen in isopentane (BDH, Poole,
UK) at 40 to 45°C. Frozen transverse sections of spinal cord (10 µm) were taken at 19°C in a cryostat and thaw-mounted onto
poly-lysine-coated microscope slides (BDH).
Two oligonucleotides (synthesized by Oswel DNA Service) complementary
and specific to nucleotides 299-333 and 658-693 of rat UCH-L1 mRNA
were used (Kajimoto et al., 1992 ). The oligonucleotides were 3'
end-labeled with deoxyadenosine
[35S]-triphosphate (specific activity
<1250 Ci/mol; DuPont NEN) using terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase
(Promega). In situ hybridization histochemistry was
performed using methodology described previously (Blackburn-Munro and
Fleetwood-Walker, 1999 ). Controls used to demonstrate specificity of
the respective oligonucleotide consisted of (1) pretreating sections
with RNase A (1 mg/ml; Sigma, Poole, UK) for 1 hr before hybridization
and (2) coincubation of the 35S-labeled
oligonucleotide in the hybridization medium with a 100-fold excess of
unlabeled oligonucleotide.
Image analysis
Cell counts. The number of cells positively
hybridized for UCH-L1 within lateral and midway between lateral and
medial ("mediolateral") locations of laminas I-V was calculated at
40× magnification (total grid area 175 × 175 µm). Cells were
considered to be positively labeled if the silver grains showed a dense
pattern around the nucleus and were fivefold denser than a typical
nonexpressing cell within the same field area or background levels. The
total number of positively hybridized cells was determined for each spinal cord section (n = 10 sections), and these values
were used to calculate the mean number of positively hybridized cells
per unit area, in the lumbar spinal segments L3-L6 (naïve,
n = 4; neuropathic, n = 4).
Silver grain counting. To assess any changes in the relative
expression of UCH-L1 mRNA after chronic constriction injury, the mean
silver grain density per positively labeled cell was measured using
Image 1.44 software (Improvision) with video input from a
charge-coupled device camera (Sony, Tokyo, Japan) mounted on a
Zeiss Axioscope microscope (40× magnification). For each section,
counts were made both ipsilateral and contralateral to the nerve injury
in lateral and medial zones. A minimum of five positively hybridized
cells was counted in each region. A pixel count was obtained, which was
converted to silver grain number via a predetermined calibration
procedure. The mean number of silver grains per cell was calculated for
each section (n = 10 sections). Then the mean number of
silver grains per cell could be calculated. In total, 500 positively
hybridized cells were counted within one side of the spinal dorsal horn
for each animal.
Western blot analysis of the expression of ubiquitin C-terminal
hydrolase. Hemisected L3-L6 spinal cord samples
(naive, n = 4; neuropathic, n = 4;
sham, n = 4) were homogenized into standard Laemmli
buffer and denatured at 100°C for 5 min. Extracts were separated by
electrophoresis on precast 10% polyacrylamide gels (Bio-Rad, Hemel
Hempstead, UK), transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membrane, and
blocked overnight at 4°C in 4% Marvel, 0.1% Tween 20. Blots were
probed with primary antibody to UCH-L1/PGP 9.5 (Affiniti; 1:5000) or
GAPDH (Chemicon; 1:750) and detected by peroxidase-linked secondary
antibody enhanced chemiluminescence.
Ex vivo PKA activity assays. After lumbar laminectomy
under anesthesia, rats, (naïve, n = 3;
neuropathic, n = 3) were treated by topical application
of agents to the dorsal surface of the spinal cord. Epoxomicin (15 µM), MG-132 (100 µM),or
vehicle (0.5% dimethylformamide in saline) was applied in a volume of
500 µl for 1 hr before rapid removal of segments L3-L6 to cold
buffer on ice. cAMP-evoked PKA enzymatic activity and
constitutive activity (thought to reflect PKA previously activated
in situ) were measured by the following procedure, a
modification of those of Roskoski (1983) and Corbin (1983) . Hemisected
spinal cord samples were rapidly homogenized on ice in 20 mM Na HEPES, pH 7.5, with 5% glycerol, 0.25%
BSA, 1 mM EGTA, 1 mM
dithiothreitol, 1 mM 4-(2-aminoethyl) benzene
sulfonyl fluoride (Alexis Corporation, Nottingham, UK), 2 µg/ml
aprotinin, 10 µg/ml leupeptin, 2 µg/ml pepstatin, 50 µg/ml soybean trypsin inhibitor, 25 mM Na
-glycerophosphate, 1 mM Na orthovanadate, 1 mM NaF, 1 µM calyculin A,
1 µM cypermethrin (Calbiochem, Nottingham, UK),
and 500 µM isobutyl methylxanthine. All
reagents were from Sigma unless indicated otherwise. Aliquots of
homogenate were incubated for 10 min at 30°C (linear range of assay)
with 100 µM kemptide as substrate, 100 µM ATP (with
[33P] -ATP to 0.2 µCi per tube;
DuPont NEN, Dreiech, Germany), 10 mM
MgCl2, and 10 µM cAMP
and/or 1 µM PKI6-22
amide (Calbiochem) as appropriate. Assays were terminated with cold TCA
(to 10%), centrifugation, and spotting of the supernatant onto P81
phosphocellulose paper. Samples were washed extensively in 75 mM
H3PO4 and dried before
scintillation counting. Positive controls were performed with purified
bovine heart PKA catalytic subunit, and each homogenate was assayed in
parallel for cAMP-evoked activity (in the absence or presence of
PKI6-22 amide), constitutive activity (in the
absence or presence of PKI6-22 amide), and zero
time incubation blanks. Authentic (PKI6-22
amide-sensitive) PKA-activity was always 86-97% of the recorded
activity for constitutive and cAMP-evoked conditions, and zero time
blanks were always <2% of total activity.
Subcellular distribution of specific [3H]
phorbol dibutyrate binding sites. After topical application of
drugs and homogenization in the same ice-cold medium as for PKA assays
above, spinal cord (L3-L6) homogenates were assayed for
membrane/cytosol content of specific
[3H] phorbol dibutyrate binding sites as
described previously (Johnson et al., 1996 ). Briefly, after
centrifugation at 12,000 × g for 20 min, the membrane
pellet was resuspended in 50 mM Tris HCl, pH 7.4, with 4 mg/ml fatty acid-free BSA (Tris BSA), and aliquots were
incubated (30 min at 37°C) with 5 nM
[3H] phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (0.03 µCi per tube; DuPont NEN) with or without 10 µM unlabeled phorbol dibutyrate to define
nonspecificity. Aliquots of the supernatant cytosolic fraction were
added to Tris BSA containing 1 mM
CaCl2, 10 mM
MgCl2, and 0.5 mg/ml sonicated phosphatidylserine
(Sigma) before equivalent incubation with ligand. Bovine -globulin
(to 0.6 mg/ml) and polyethylene glycol-8000 (to 20%) in 50 mM Tris HCl were added to cytosol samples and
incubated for 20 min at 4°C to precipitate proteins. After
centrifugation at 12,000 × g for 20 min, all samples
were aspirated, and radioactivity in the pellets was measured by liquid
scintillation counting.
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RESULTS |
Behavioral reflex studies
Neuropathic animals showed behavioral alterations after CCI that
were consistent with previous data from our laboratory (Blackburn-Munro and Fleetwood-Walker, 1999 ; Dickinson et al., 1999 ). Development of
neuropathic behaviors became measurable at 8 d after surgery, with
peak changes at 12-14 d. Most experiments were performed using CCI
animals taken at 12-14 d after surgery, although some samples for time
course studies were taken at 4 and 8 d.
Sensory responses of single dorsal horn neurons: application of
inhibitors of the proteasome complex
Most of the recorded neurons were multi-receptive, responding to
both innocuous and noxious stimuli. They were estimated to be located
within dorsal horn laminas III-V at depths of ~200-700 µm from
the surface of the spinal cord that were measured using electrode
contact at the dorsal surface and dye spot deposition in histological
sections after experimentation. To facilitate neuronal classification
and obtain sustained neuronal activation after mustard oil application,
only neurons with receptive fields on the hairy skin of the hindlimb
were investigated. Neuronal activation to application of either
innocuous brush or mustard oil stimuli to the peripheral receptive
field was found in the majority of recorded neurons in both
normal and neuropathic animals showing peak behavioral reflex changes
indicative of neuropathy. However, activation of neurons to cold
stimuli (4°C) were found only in neuropathic animals, which is in
agreement with the observation that it is only neuropathic animals that
develop a paw withdrawal response to cold water (4°C). The
spontaneous firing rates of neurons were low (1-2 Hz), and those in
response to the stimuli were between 12 and 50 Hz. For each neuron, in
the majority of cases, the rate of firing in response to the different
stimuli, before drug application, was within 15 Hz. No significant
change in activity was ever observed during control ejection of saline, pH 7.0, or the vehicle (0.5% aqueous dimethylformamide, pH 4.5) at
currents up to 60 nA for 5 min. In naive animals, ionophoretic application of the proteasome inhibitors lactacystin or MG-132 caused
partial inhibition of mustard oil-induced activity but no significant
inhibition of brush-evoked activity (Fig.
1a,b; Table
1). The effects of lactacystin were
similar in sham-operated animals (Table 1).

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Figure 1.
Typical effects of ionophoretic application of the
proteasome inhibitor lactacystin on stimulus-evoked sensory responses
of single dorsal horn neurons in naive and neuropathic animals. In
naive animals, lactacystin had no effect on brush-evoked activation of
dorsal horn neuron cell firing rate, measured as action potentials per
second (A/s), but it caused a selective attenuation of
mustard oil-evoked activation of dorsal horn neuron cell firing
(a, b). In contrast, in neuropathic
animals, lactacystin reduced dorsal horn neuron firing evoked by
application of brush, mustard oil, and cold stimuli to the neuronal
receptive field area (c-e). The
bar (bottom right) indicates 1 min
duration. Lines above the firing records indicate the
duration of the drug application by ionophoresis, close to the recorded
cell. This is measured in nanoamperes (nA) of current
used to eject the drug and was increased sequentially by 10 nA every
1-2 min.
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Table 1.
Effects of ionophoretically applied proteasome inhibitors
on sensory responses of single dorsal horn neurons
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In neuropathic animals, however, the drugs caused a greater percentage
reduction in all responses, inhibitory effects on brush responses now
becoming statistically significant (Fig. 1c-e;
Table 1). The de novo responses to cold, which appeared only
in neuropathic animals, were also significantly inhibited by both
lactacystin and MG-132.
Behavioral reflex changes after intrathecal administration of the
proteasome inhibitors MG-132 and epoxomicin
Intrathecal administration of the proteasome inhibitors MG-132 (5 nmol/50 µl) and epoxomicin (0.75 nmol/50 µl) in rats exhibiting peak neuropathic behavioral changes significantly reversed thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical and cold allodynia over a 90 min period (Fig. 2a-c).
Control intrathecal administration of vehicle in CCI rats had no
significant effect on baselines (Fig. 2a-c). The intrathecal administration of proteasome inhibitors in naive rats had
no significant effect on baseline values (data not shown).

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Figure 2.
The effects of intrathecal administration of the
proteasome inhibitors epoxomicin and MG-132 on reflex withdrawal
responses to noxious thermal, innocuous mechanical, and innocuous cold
stimuli in CCI rats. Data are presented as the mean paw withdrawal
latency (in seconds) to noxious thermal stimulation (a,
b), paw withdrawal threshold in milliNewtons per
millimeters squared (mN/mm2) to
mechanical stimulation (c, d), and
suspended paw elevation time in seconds [SPET(s)] to
cold water (at 4°C) (e, f),
before and after intrathecal administration of epoxomicin (0.75 nmol/50
µl) (a-c) and MG-132 (5 nmol/50 µl)
(d-f), respectively (at
arrow). Injection of vehicle (0.5% dimethylformamide in
saline) had no detectable effect on reflexes. Paw withdrawal latency
from noxious heat and innocuous cold stimuli ipsilateral to CCI showed
significant differences between pre-drug and post-drug administration
values ( p < 0.05; one-way ANOVA,
followed by a Dunnett's post hoc test). Significant
differences between contralateral and ipsilateral paw are indicated
(*p < 0.05; Student's paired t test). Paw
withdrawal thresholds to mechanical stimulation ipsilateral to CCI
showed significant differences between pre-drug and post-drug
administration values ( p < 0.05;
Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA, followed by a post hoc
Dunn's test). Significant differences between contralateral and
ipsilateral paw withdrawal thresholds are indicated (*p<
0.05; Mann-Whitney U test).
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mRNA analysis by RT-PCR
A semiquantitative RT-PCR approach was used for the screening of
the UCH-L1 gene, the expression of which may be altered in a
neuropathic state. Using the samples described previously, changes in
the abundance of PCR product were normalized against GAPDH levels (Fig.
3a). GAPDH has previously been
shown to be a stable and consistent housekeeping standard in cases of
spinal cord and brain insult (Medhurst et al., 2000 ). RT-PCR performed
on cDNA extracted from the spinal cord of rats using a PCR mixture
containing primers to UCH-L1 and GAPDH generated two distinct PCR
products of 324 and 292 bp, respectively (Fig. 3a). Analysis
was performed on points in the PCR process at which exponential
amplification was observed (whereby the abundance of both UCH and GAPDH
is directly proportional to the level of respective mRNA in the
sample). Concurrent PCR on samples for which reverse
transcriptase was omitted produced no detectable amplification products
(data not shown). A statistically significant increase (mean + 47%) in
the relative abundance of UCH-L1 mRNA was seen in the
ipsilateral as compared with the contralateral spinal cord hemisection
at 14 d (Fig. 3a). No significant changes in mRNA
levels were observed between spinal cord sections of sham-operated or
naive rats or ipsilateral to CCI in animals taken 4-8 d after nerve
ligation.

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Figure 3.
Determination of levels of mRNA for ubiquitin
C-terminal hydrolase-L1 (UCH-L1). a,
Relative abundance of UCH-L1 mRNA from spinal cord of CCI-treated rats
as assessed by semiquantitative RT-PCR normalized to the signal
obtained for the cellular housekeeping enzyme GAPDH. Densitometric
analysis indicated that the relative UCH-L1 expression was similar in
all conditions except in tissue ipsilateral to CCI at 14 d, where
expression was significantly greater than that in contralateral samples
(*p < 0.05 by paired Student's t
test; n = 3). Further analysis of the changes at
14 d after CCI was made by in situ methods. See
b and Table 2 for quantification data. b,
In situ hybridization histochemistry to show UCH-L1 mRNA
expression in lamina I of the rat medial dorsal horn. High-power,
light-field photomicrographs showing that expression of mRNA for UCH-L1
was higher ipsilateral to CCI after 14 d, compared with
contralateral tissue and naive dorsal horn. Scale bar, 100 µm.
|
|
In situ hybridization histochemistry
In accordance with the expression of UCH-L1 protein throughout
eukaryotic neural and neuroendocrine cell types and in line with its
role in proteasomal functioning, the mRNA for rat UCH-L1 was
distributed widely in spinal cord of both naive and neuropathic animals. After CCI, there were distinct changes in the expression of
mRNA for UCH-L1 in the dorsal horn ipsilateral to nerve injury, compared with contralateral and naive values. The total number of
neurons positively expressing mRNA for UCH-L1 was significantly increased in the ipsilateral dorsal horn, both medially in laminas I,
II, and III and laterally in laminas I and II (Fig. 3b;
Table 2). Silver grain density was
significantly increased mediolaterally in laminas I, II, III, and V and
laterally in laminas I, II, and III (Fig. 3b; Table 2). The
significant increments in numbers of hybridizing cells and silver grain
density ranged from 22-28 to 17-41%, respectively. Within the
ventral horn of normal animals, labeling of motoneurons was especially
intense but showed no significant change after CCI treatment (data not
shown).
Western blot analysis to monitor changes in protein levels of
UCH-L1 after CCI
To determine whether the increase in UCH-L1 mRNA after CCI leads
to an overall increase in the translation of its protein product, we
performed Western blot analysis using an antibody specific to
UCH-L1. Densitometry of immunoreactive bands revealed an ipsilateral
increase of 27-31% after CCI when compared with contralateral,
sham-operated, and naive sample values. Samples were normalized in
relation to levels of the established cellular housekeeper enzyme
GAPDH, and values were expressed as the percentage relative GAPDH
expression (Fig.
4a,b).

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Figure 4.
Western blot analysis of the expression of UCH-L1
protein. Western blots of spinal cord samples from neuropathic, naive,
and sham-operated rats. a shows an increase in UCH-L1
protein expression ipsilateral (Ipsi) to CCI in
neuropathic animals. No change from naive samples was observed in the
sham-operated or contralateral side (Contra) of CCI
samples. b represents UCH-L1 expression as a percentage
of GAPDH expression in terms of relative gray scale values after
quantitative densitometry of ECL films. Data are presented as mean ± SEM (n = 3; *p < 0.05, from
control contralateral values; Student's paired t
test).
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Regulation of constitutive spinal cord PKA activity by the
ubiquitin-proteasome system
To obtain a readout of the function of the ubiquitin-proteasome
system in spinal cord, we monitored the enzymatic activity of
PKA, the activity of which is known to be regulated through degradation
of the regulatory subunits by the proteasome (Hegde et al., 1997 ; Chain
et al., 1999 ). Degradation of regulatory subunits, leaving a relative
excess of unrestrained catalytic subunits, is thought to lead to an
elevated level of constitutive enzyme activity, which can be monitored
by ex vivo enzyme assays (Roskoski, 1983 ). Table
3 shows that the fraction of PKA activity
that was constitutive was significantly elevated in spinal cord
ipsilateral to CCI and that this elevation was prevented by local
administration of the selective proteasome inhibitors epoxomicin and
MG-132 to the spinal cord. This matches our other molecular and
physiological data in suggesting that the activity of the
ubiquitin-proteasome system is elevated in response to nerve
injury.
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|
Table 3.
Effects of the topical administration of the proteasome
inhibitors epoxomicin and MG-132 on constitutive activation of protein
kinase A induced by CCI
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Effects of proteasome inhibitor on CCI-induced translocation of
[3H] phorbol dibutyrate binding sites
To investigate whether CCI-induced activation of PKC is altered by
inhibition of the proteasome, we measured cytosol/membrane translocation of specific [3H] phorbol
dibutyrate binding sites after topical administration of the proteasome
inhibitor epoxomicin. In accordance with previous reports (Mao et al.,
1993a ,b ), we found clear increases in specific binding of
[3H] phorbol dibutyrate to the membrane
rather than cytosolic fraction of tissue ipsilateral to CCI (Table
4). Smaller but still statistically significant increases were seen also on the contralateral side. Intrathecal administration of epoxomicin caused no detectable alteration in the translocation of [3H]
phorbol dibutyrate binding sites (either ipsilateral or contralateral to CCI) under conditions in which it was shown to reduce the
ipsilateral increase in constitutive activity of PKA (Tables 3, 4).
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|
Table 4.
Lack of effect of topical administration of the proteasome
inhibitor epoxomicin on membrane translocation/activation of protein
kinase C
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Injury in afferent nerves can elicit their sustained firing and
result in phenotypic and functional changes both within dorsal root
ganglia and in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. The resulting state
of central sensitization plays a key role in bringing about the
hyperalgesia and allodynia, as well as sensitivity to cold, that
characterize neuropathic pain states. We now provide evidence to
suggest that the ubiquitin-proteasome system is important in the
cellular mechanisms underlying neuropathic sensitization after CCI. The
proteasome also appears to play a role in the normal spinal processing
of noxious, but not innocuous, sensory stimuli. After CCI, previously
innocuous stimuli such as brush and cold are perceived as noxious and
correspondingly show sensitivity to blockade by proteasome inhibitors.
Both the behavioral reflex studies and especially the
electrophysiological experiments in animals with established CCI
sensitization showed a rapid onset of activation of the proteasome
inhibitors. Several structurally distinct proteasome inhibitors
exhibited similar effects, suggesting that they are effective because
of their actions on the proteasome. The rapidity of action suggests
that ongoing degradation of a key signaling regulator (such as PKA
regulatory subunits) is actively essential for the maintenance of
established neuropathic sensitization. The contribution of the
ubiquitin-proteasome system to sensitization was closely paralleled by
increased expression (ipsilateral to nerve injury) of UCH-L1 at the
level of RT-PCR, in situ hybridization (ISHH), and
immunoblot. The steady-state elevation of UCH-L1 expression observed
here at 14 d after CCI is less than the acute rise seen within 4 hr after LTF in Aplysia (Hegde et al., 1997 ). This may relate in part to the higher basal levels of UCH-L1 in mammalian neurons (Wilkinson et al., 1989 ). Furthermore, the CCI sensitization model differs from LTF in that changes in spinal neuronal function develop slowly and are then maintained over many days. If optimal UCH-L1 activity is required for operation of the ubiquitin-proteasome system and this pathway plays a greater functional role after CCI (as
demonstrated) then even small changes in UCH-L1 such as the increment
of ~30% seen in RT-PCR, ISHH, and immunoblot methods may be
functionally significant. We do not know whether the level of UCH-L1
expression is rate limiting for proteasome function here, but if that
is the case (as appears to be so in Aplysia LTF), then the
requirement for ongoing proteasome activity shown by the inhibitor
results suggests that small increases might well result in functional
change. The time course of the increase in UCH-L1 mRNA ipsilateral to
CCI matched closely the development of behavioral reflex sensitization
that we observed, being clearly established by 14 d after nerve
ligation. No significant increases were detected at 4 or 8 d after
surgery, times at which thermal hyperalgesia, mechanical allodynia, and
cold allodynia were undetectable and showed <25% development of
maximal effect, respectively, in these experiments. UCH-L1 plays an
essential role in the recycling of ubiquitin, which is necessary to
maintain adequate rates of proteasome-mediated degradation of proteins.
The regulatory subunits of PKA are an example of such a known
proteasome target, and their degradation is thought to lead to the
formation of constitutively active PKA. In accordance with our other
data, elevated levels of constitutively active PKA were found in spinal
cord ipsilateral to CCI, and this increase was reversed by acute local
administration of a selective proteasome inhibitor. No changes were
observed in the CCI-induced cytosol to membrane translocation of PKC,
an alternative signal transduction mediator, which is not considered to
be directly influenced by proteasome function.
Activity-dependent synaptic changes, associated with altered states of
responsiveness and "synaptic memory," have been investigated in LTF
in Aplysia (Bailey and Kandel, 1993 ) and in LTP in central mammalian neurons (Bliss and Collingridge, 1993 ). Although the precise
nature and origin of these alterations differ, they may share a number
of common features with the central sensitization that occurs within
the spinal cord in response to chronic activation of nociceptive inputs.
Neuropathic sensitization is similar to other forms of repetitive
input-induced sensitization in spinal cord (such as wind-up and
inflammatory sensitization) in its dependence on NMDA receptor function
(Mao et al., 1993a ,b ; Tal and Bennett, 1993 ). Although distinct
neurochemical changes in these different pain states suggest that the
mechanisms leading to NMDA receptor activation may differ, the NMDA
receptor appears to be crucial to the sensitization phenomenon. It is
not yet clear whether all forms of spinal sensitization rely on
proteasome function as neuropathic sensitization does. However, the
attenuation by proteasome inhibitors of both sub-acute mustard
oil-evoked responses and neuropathic sensitization (which have in
common a dependence on NMDA receptor-mediated events) (Heppenstall and
Fleetwood-Walker, 1997 ) suggests that the role of the proteasome may
relate closely to NMDA receptor activation. Whether the proteasome
plays a role in processes leading to NMDA receptor activation or in
events downstream of either the Ca2+
entry-mediated or adapter protein-mediated signaling of the receptor is
not yet clear. Nevertheless, the proteasome clearly represents an
interesting new target in neuropathic and other forms of pain.
PKA is implicated in spinal sensitization and pain (Cerne et al., 1993 ;
Sluka, 1997 ). PKA may be activated downstream of receptors that lead to
cAMP production (or downstream of
Ca2+-mobilizing receptors, if
Ca2+-activated isoforms of adenylate
cyclase are present) and among many other targets is known to
phosphorylate and activate both NMDA- and AMPA-type glutamate receptors
(Greengard et al., 1991 ; Roche et al., 1996 ; Westphal et al., 1999 ).
Although mutant mice with a targeted deletion of one of the PKA
regulatory subunits did not show any attenuation of neuropathic
sensitization (Malmberg et al., 1997 ), the fact that PKA catalytic
activity is normally restrained by the presence of regulatory subunits
makes this difficult to interpret. In the LTF model in
Aplysia, PKA appears to play a key role in increased
responsiveness, and substantial evidence indicates that an imbalance of
PKA regulatory and catalytic subunits, mediated by proteasome
degradation of the former, is a crucial factor (Hegde et al., 1993 ;
Chain et al., 1999 ). This matches closely the proteasome-dependent
generation of constitutively active PKA that we observed ipsilateral to
CCI (Table 3). In the Aplysia model, expression of the
homolog of UCH-L1 is rapidly increased in the facilitation paradigm
(Hegde et al., 1997 ), again closely paralleling the observations here
with neuropathic sensitization, except that the full development of the
sensitized state here occurs over a more prolonged time period. An
alternative pathway that is known to be subject to proteasome
regulation is that of the transcription factor, nuclear factor B
(NF- B). NF- B exists in a latent form in unstimulated cells,
complexed to the inhibitory protein, I- B. Inflammation-associated
molecules, such as cytokines, can induce I- B phosphorylation,
leading to its ubiquitination and degradation by the proteasome (Karin
and Delhase, 2000 ). Dissociated NF- B can then regulate the
expression of various target genes, including the inducible enzymes
cyclo-oxygenase-2 and nitric oxide synthase, adhesion molecules,
cytokines, and neuropeptides (O'Neill and Kaltschmidt, 1997 ). Although
NF- B expression decreases acutely after nerve injury (Doyle and
Hunt, 1997 ), NF- B immunoreactivity has been reported to increase
within ipsilateral DRG neurons 2 weeks after nerve injury (Ma and
Bisby, 1998 ), perhaps in response to cytokines and trophic factors
secreted by non-neuronal cells during Wallerian degeneration. In
cerebellar granule neurons, NF- B expression appears to be regulated
by glutamate acting via NMDA receptors (Guerrini et al., 1995 ). In
pilot experiments with intrathecal administration of the selective
NF- B inhibitor parthenolide (Alexis) to CCI rats (1.5 nmol/50 µl
0.3% dimethylformamide in saline), we found no detectable change in
behavioral responses to heat, cold, or mechanical stimuli (data not
shown). This suggests that although certain proteasome targets like PKA
may play an important role in neuropathic sensitization, others like
the NF- B/I- B complex may not be important. Nevertheless, more
extensive studies on these and other pathways will be necessary before
it is clear how the proteasome plays out its key role in enabling
neuropathic sensitization.
In conclusion, we have unexpectedly shown that proteasome inhibitors
can selectively inhibit neuropathic sensitization, which is likely to
underlie the development of chronic intractable pain after nerve
injury. Importantly, proteasome inhibitors attenuate neuropathic
allodynia without impairing normal sensory responses to low-intensity
peripheral stimuli, a particularly advantageous therapeutic profile.
Expression of a key enzyme in ubiquitin-proteasome function is
increased in spinal dorsal horn ipsilateral to injury, as is the
activity of a known target of the complex (PKA), which is expected to
display deregulated constitutive activity after proteasome action.
Proteasome-dependent activation of PKA in neuropathic sensitization
closely parallels that in LTF in Aplysia. Proteasome inhibitors are under phase I trials as anti-cancer drugs (Lee and
Goldberg, 1998 ). In many cases, advanced development of tumors leads to
local inflammation and pressure trauma to afferent nerves, resulting in
a neuropathic component to cancer pain. The present study predicts that
in addition to any direct effect on cancer cells, proteasome inhibitors
would exert a useful additional role in attenuating the central
sensitization that leads to chronic hyperalgesia and allodynia.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 4, 2001; revised Nov. 20, 2001; accepted Nov. 27, 2001.
This work was supported by The Wellcome Trust (S.F.-W.) and by The
Medical Research Council and the University of Edinburgh for the award
of Studentships (A.M. and E.G., respectively). We thank staff at
Wellcome Animal Research Unit and Medical Faculty Animal Area
facilities for animal husbandry.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. S. M. Fleetwood-Walker,
Department of Preclinical Veterinary Sciences, University of Edinburgh,
Edinburgh EH9 1QH, UK. E-mail: sfw{at}vet.ed.ac.uk.
G. Blackburn-Munro's present address: NeuroSearch A/S, 93 Pederstrupvej, #DK-2750, Ballerup, Denmark.
T. Dickinson's present address: Department of Pharmacology, Quintiles
Scotland Ltd., Heriot-Watt University Research Park, Riccarton,
Edinburgh EH14 4AP, UK.
 |
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