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Vol. 298, Issue 2, 703-710, August 2001
-Receptor Involved in Stimulation of
Nociceptor Endings of Mice
Department of Molecular Pharmacology and Neuroscience, Nagasaki
University School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Nagasaki, Japan (H.U.,
M.I., A.Y., K.M.); Department of Psychopharmacology, Tokyo Institute of
Psychiatry, Tokyo, Japan (H.Y.); Central Research Laboratories, Santen
Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., Osaka, Japan (J.M., K.M., S.M.)
In peripheral nociceptive flexor test, SA4503, (+)-pentazocine, and
(+)-3-(hydroxyphenyl)-N-(1-propyl)piperidine,
representative
-receptor agonists, elicited dose-dependent flexor
responses. These responses were blocked by
-receptor antagonists
NE-100 or BD1063, but not by pretreatments with antisense
oligodeoxynucleotide for
1 binding protein. The
-agonists'
nociception is attributed to the substance P (SP) release from
nociceptor endings through activations of G
i1 and
phospholipase C (PLC). On the other hand, attomolar doses of
neurosteroids such as dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS) and
pregnenolone sulfate caused similar nociception, and they were blocked
by progesterone (PROG). However, DHEAS nociception was not affected by
pertussis toxin, but was completely inhibited by a PLC inhibitor
or thapsigargin. Although the nociception by lower doses of DHEAS was
abolished by diphenhydramine (DPH), H1 antagonist, there were
dose-dependent responses by high doses of DHEAS in the presence of DPH.
The responses by DHEAS in the presence of DPH were blocked by NE-100,
and those by (+)-pentazocine were blocked by PROG. All these findings
suggest that two novel types of neurosteroid receptors exist, neuronal
NS1/
-type, which mediates activation of G
i1 by
neurosteroids and
-agonists, followed by SP release from nociceptor
endings; and NS2 type, which mediates histamine release from mast cells
by very low doses of neurosteroids.
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