Induction of the gene encoding pro-dynorphin by experimentally induced arthritis enhances staining for dynorphin in the spinal cord of rats

https://doi.org/10.1016/0306-4522(89)90031-6Get rights and content

Abstract

The response of dynorphinergic neurons in the lumbosacral spinal cord of the rat to chronic arthritic inflammation was studied by the combined use of biochemical and immunohistochemical procedures.

In polyarthritic rats, in which all four limbs showed a swelling, inflammation and hyperalgesia, a pronounced elevation was seen in the level of messenger ribonucleic acid encoding prodynorphin (pro-enkephalin B) in the lumbosacral spinal cord. In addition, the levels of immunoreactive dynorphin A1–17, a primary gene product of this precursor, were greatly increased. This activation was reflected in a striking intensification of the immunohistochemical staining of both dynorphin and α/β-neo-endorphin, a further major product of pro-dynorphin. In control animals perikarya were stained exceedingly rarely and encountered only in laminae I and II. Stained fibres and varicosities were seen throughout the dorsal and ventral gray matter, being most concentrated in laminae I, II, IV and V of the dorsal horn and dorsolateral to the central canal. In polyarthritic rats, fibres and varicosities were much more intensely stained throughout the cord, particularly in laminae I/II, IV and V and dorsolateral to the central canal. Many strongly-stained perikarya could be seen; these comprised many small diameter cells in laminae I and II, and some large diameter marginal neurons and large diameter cells, heterogenous in appearance, in the deeper laminae IV and V. Monolaterally inflamed rats injected in the right hind-paw showed pathological changes only in this limb. Correspondingly, in unilateral inflammation, an elevation in immunoreactive dynorphin was seen exclusively in the right dorsal horn and the above-described intensification of staining for dynorphin and neo-endorphin was seen only in this quadrant. This reveals the neuroanatomical specificity of the response.

Thus, in the lumbosacral cord of the rat, pro-dynorphin neurons are most preponderant in laminae I, II, IV and V. A pronounced intensification of the immunohistochemical staining of these neurons is seen in chronic arthritis. Furthermore, there is a parallel elevation in the levels of messenger ribonucleic acid encoding pro-dynorphin and of its primary products dynorphin and neo-endorphin.

These findings demonstrate an enhancement in the functional activity of spinal cord localized dynorphin neurons in the response to chronic arthritic inflammation.

References (81)

  • HanJ-S. et al.

    Analgesia induced by intrathecal injection of dynorphin B in the rat

    Life Sci.

    (1984)
  • HeadleyP.M. et al.

    Comparison of mu, kappa and sigma-preferring agonists for effects on spinal nociceptive and other responses in rats

    Neuropeptides

    (1984)
  • HölltV.

    Multiple endogenous opioid peptides

    Trends Neurosci.

    (1983)
  • HölltV. et al.

    Pro-dynorphin gene expression is enhanced in the spinal cord of chronic arthritic rats

    Neurosci. Lett.

    (1987)
  • HuntS.P. et al.

    An immunohistochemical study of neuronal populations containing neuropeptides or gamma-aminobutyrate within the superficial layers of the rat dorsal horn

    Neurosci.

    (1981)
  • KhachaturianH. et al.

    Dynorphin immuno-cytochemistry in the rat central nervous system

    Trends Neurosci.

    (1982)
  • MerchenthalerI. et al.

    Immunocytochemical localization of proenkephalin-derived peptides in the central nervous system of the rat

    Neuroscience

    (1986)
  • MillanM.J. et al.

    The influence of foot-shock stress upon brain, pituitary and spinal cord pools of immunoreactive dynorphin in rats

    Neurosci. Lett.

    (1981)
  • MillanM.J. et al.

    The endocrinology of the opioids

    Int. Rev. Neurobiol.

    (1985)
  • MillanM.J. et al.

    Monoarthritis of the hind paw as a model of unilateral localized inflammatory pain: influence on multiple opioid systems in the spinal cord of the rat

    Pain

    (1988)
  • MortonC.R. et al.

    A function of opioid peptides in the spinal cord of the cat: intracellular studies of motoneurones doring naloxone administration

    Neuropeptides

    (1982)
  • NahinR.L. et al.

    A long ascending pathway of enkephalin-like immunoreactive spinoreticular neurones in the rat

    Neurosci. Lett.

    (1986)
  • PrzewlockiR. et al.

    Mixed opioid and non-opioid effects of dynorphin and dynorphin-related peptides after their intrathecal injection in rats

    Neuropeptides

    (1983)
  • PrzewlockiR. et al.

    Analgesic effects of mu, delta and kappa-opiate agonists and, in particular, dynorphin at the spinal level

    Life Sci.

    (1983)
  • RudaM.A. et al.

    Neurochemistry and neural circuitry in the dorsal horn

    Prog. Brain Res.

    (1986)
  • SasekC.A. et al.

    Coexistence of enkephalin and dynorphin immunoreactivities in neurones in the dorsal grey commisure of the sixth lumbar and first sacral spinal cord segments in rat

    Brain Res.

    (1986)
  • SeizingerB.R. et al.

    Concomitant neonatal development andin vitro release of dynorphin and alpha-neo-endorphin

    Life Sci.

    (1982)
  • SpampinatoS. et al.

    Characterization of dynorphin A-induced antinociception at spinal level

    Eur. J. Pharmac.

    (1985)
  • SweetnamP.M. et al.

    Localization of dynorphin gene product-immunoreactivity in neurons from spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia

    Neuroscience

    (1986)
  • TraynorJ.R. et al.

    Opiate binding in the rat spinal cord: evidence for mu and delta sites

    Neuropeptides

    (1984)
  • VincentS.R. et al.

    Dynorphin-immunoreactive neurons in the central nervous system of the rat

    Neurosci. Lett.

    (1982)
  • WeiheE. et al.

    Prodynorphin opioid peptides in small somatosensory primary afferents of guinea-pig

    Neurosci. Lett.

    (1985)
  • WeiheE. et al.

    Co-localization of pro-enkephalin and prodynorphinderived opioid peptides in laminae IV/V spinal neurons revealed in arthritic rats

    Neurosci. Lett.

    (1988)
  • WeiheE. et al.

    Immunohistochemical evidence for a co-transmitter role of opioid peptides in primary sensory neurons

    Prog. Brain Res.

    (1988)
  • WüsterM. et al.

    The preference of putative proenkephalins for different types of opiate receptors

    Life Sci.

    (1981)
  • YakshT.L. et al.

    Peripheral and central substrates involved in the rostrad transmission of nociceptive information

    Pain

    (1982)
  • YakshT.L. et al.

    Studies on the release by somatic stimulation from rat and cat spinal cord of active materials which displace dihydromorphine in opiate-binding assay

    Brain Res.

    (1983)
  • ZieglgänsbergerW. et al.

    The effects of methionine and leucine enkephalin on spinal neurones of the cat

    Brain Res.

    (1979)
  • AkilH. et al.

    The many possible roles of opioids and related peptides in stress-induced analgesia

    Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci.

    (1986)
  • BasbaumA.I. et al.

    Endogenous pain control system: brainstem spinal pathways and endorphin circuitry

    A. Rev. Neurosci.

    (1984)
  • Cited by (0)

    §

    Present address: FONDAX, Groupe de Recherche Servier, 7 rue Ampère, F-92800 Puteaux, France.

    View full text