Spinal actions of lipoxin A4 and 17(R)-resolvin D1 attenuate inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity and spinal TNF release.

Lipoxins and resolvins have anti-inflammatory and pro-resolving actions and accumulating evidence indicates that these lipid mediators also attenuate pain-like behavior in a number of experimental models of inflammation and tissue injury-induced pain. The present study was undertaken to assess if sp...

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Main Authors: Sally Abdelmoaty, Gustaf Wigerblad, Duygu B Bas, Simone Codeluppi, Teresa Fernandez-Zafra, El-Sayed El-Awady, Yasser Moustafa, Alaa El-Din S Abdelhamid, Ernst Brodin, Camilla I Svensson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3782447?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f8a47359912d4b3e8048065faade50c92020-11-25T01:34:53ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0189e7554310.1371/journal.pone.0075543Spinal actions of lipoxin A4 and 17(R)-resolvin D1 attenuate inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity and spinal TNF release.Sally AbdelmoatyGustaf WigerbladDuygu B BasSimone CodeluppiTeresa Fernandez-ZafraEl-Sayed El-AwadyYasser MoustafaAlaa El-Din S AbdelhamidErnst BrodinCamilla I SvenssonLipoxins and resolvins have anti-inflammatory and pro-resolving actions and accumulating evidence indicates that these lipid mediators also attenuate pain-like behavior in a number of experimental models of inflammation and tissue injury-induced pain. The present study was undertaken to assess if spinal administration of lipoxin A4 (LXA4) or 17 (R)-resolvin D1 (17(R)-RvD1) attenuates mechanical hypersensitivity in the carrageenan model of peripheral inflammation in the rat. Given the emerging role of spinal cytokines in the generation and maintenance of inflammatory pain we measured cytokine levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) after LXA4 or 17(R)-RvD1 administration, and the ability of these lipid metabolites to prevent stimuli-induced release of cytokines from cultured primary spinal astrocytes. We found that intrathecal bolus injection of LXA4 and17(R)-RvD1 attenuated inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity without reducing the local inflammation. Furthermore, both LXA4 and 17(R)-RvD1 reduced carrageenan-induced tumor necrosis factor (TNF) release in the CSF, while only 17(R)-RvD1attenuated LPS and IFN-γ-induced TNF release in astrocyte cell culture. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that lipoxins and resolvins potently suppress inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity, possibly by attenuating cytokine release from spinal astrocytes. The inhibitory effect of lipoxins and resolvins on spinal nociceptive processing puts them in an intriguing position in the search for novel pain therapeutics.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3782447?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sally Abdelmoaty
Gustaf Wigerblad
Duygu B Bas
Simone Codeluppi
Teresa Fernandez-Zafra
El-Sayed El-Awady
Yasser Moustafa
Alaa El-Din S Abdelhamid
Ernst Brodin
Camilla I Svensson
spellingShingle Sally Abdelmoaty
Gustaf Wigerblad
Duygu B Bas
Simone Codeluppi
Teresa Fernandez-Zafra
El-Sayed El-Awady
Yasser Moustafa
Alaa El-Din S Abdelhamid
Ernst Brodin
Camilla I Svensson
Spinal actions of lipoxin A4 and 17(R)-resolvin D1 attenuate inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity and spinal TNF release.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sally Abdelmoaty
Gustaf Wigerblad
Duygu B Bas
Simone Codeluppi
Teresa Fernandez-Zafra
El-Sayed El-Awady
Yasser Moustafa
Alaa El-Din S Abdelhamid
Ernst Brodin
Camilla I Svensson
author_sort Sally Abdelmoaty
title Spinal actions of lipoxin A4 and 17(R)-resolvin D1 attenuate inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity and spinal TNF release.
title_short Spinal actions of lipoxin A4 and 17(R)-resolvin D1 attenuate inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity and spinal TNF release.
title_full Spinal actions of lipoxin A4 and 17(R)-resolvin D1 attenuate inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity and spinal TNF release.
title_fullStr Spinal actions of lipoxin A4 and 17(R)-resolvin D1 attenuate inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity and spinal TNF release.
title_full_unstemmed Spinal actions of lipoxin A4 and 17(R)-resolvin D1 attenuate inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity and spinal TNF release.
title_sort spinal actions of lipoxin a4 and 17(r)-resolvin d1 attenuate inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity and spinal tnf release.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Lipoxins and resolvins have anti-inflammatory and pro-resolving actions and accumulating evidence indicates that these lipid mediators also attenuate pain-like behavior in a number of experimental models of inflammation and tissue injury-induced pain. The present study was undertaken to assess if spinal administration of lipoxin A4 (LXA4) or 17 (R)-resolvin D1 (17(R)-RvD1) attenuates mechanical hypersensitivity in the carrageenan model of peripheral inflammation in the rat. Given the emerging role of spinal cytokines in the generation and maintenance of inflammatory pain we measured cytokine levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) after LXA4 or 17(R)-RvD1 administration, and the ability of these lipid metabolites to prevent stimuli-induced release of cytokines from cultured primary spinal astrocytes. We found that intrathecal bolus injection of LXA4 and17(R)-RvD1 attenuated inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity without reducing the local inflammation. Furthermore, both LXA4 and 17(R)-RvD1 reduced carrageenan-induced tumor necrosis factor (TNF) release in the CSF, while only 17(R)-RvD1attenuated LPS and IFN-γ-induced TNF release in astrocyte cell culture. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that lipoxins and resolvins potently suppress inflammation-induced mechanical hypersensitivity, possibly by attenuating cytokine release from spinal astrocytes. The inhibitory effect of lipoxins and resolvins on spinal nociceptive processing puts them in an intriguing position in the search for novel pain therapeutics.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3782447?pdf=render
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