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Somatostatin is increased in the dorsal root ganglia of adjuvant-inflamed rat
Authors:H Ohno  Y Kuraishi  T Nanayama  M Minami  M Kawamura  M Satoh
Affiliation:Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyoto University, Japan.
Abstract:To determine whether biosynthesis of somatostatin is enhanced in the primary sensory neurons by inflammatory pain, we examined the effects of adjuvant inoculation on the content of immunoreactive somatostatin, mainly composed of somatostatin-14 and somatostatin-28, in the dorsal root ganglia and the spinal cord of the rat. The adjuvant inoculation, which produced long-lasting inflammation and hyperalgesia, increased the content of immunoreactive somatostatin, especially somatostatin-14, in the dorsal root ganglia at L4-L6 levels with no change in the dorsal and ventral horns of lumbar enlargement. Such an increase was enhanced by an intrathecal injection of colchicine (0.2 mg) that inhibits axonal flow of somatostatin. Chronic administration of the anti-inflammatory analgesic, sodium diclofenac (3 mg.kg-1.d-1), abolished an adjuvant-induced increase in the content of immunoreactive somatostatin in the dorsal root ganglia. These results suggest that the turnover (biosynthesis and axonal flow) of somatostatin in the primary sensory neurons is enhanced in the presence of persisting inflammatory pain, and support the idea that somatostatin-containing primary afferents are involved in the transmission of pain in the spinal dorsal horn.
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