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| Research article summary (published 3 Aug 2009): |
Adenovector GAD65 gene delivery into the rat trigeminal ganglion produces orofacial analgesia.
Full Abstract
BACKGROUND: Our goal is to use gene therapy to alleviate pain by targeting glial cells. In an animal model of facial pain we tested the effect of transfecting the glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) gene into satellite glial cells (SGCs) of the trigeminal ganglion by using a serotype 5 adenovector with high tropisms for glial cells. We postulated that GABA produced from the expression of GAD would reduce pain behavior by acting on GABA receptors on neurons within the ganglion. RESULTS: Injection of adenoviral vectors (AdGAD65) directly into the trigeminal ganglion leads to sustained expression of the GAD65 isoform over the 4 weeks observation period. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that adenovirus-mediated GAD65 expression and GABA synthesis were mainly in SGCs. GABAA and GABAB receptors were both seen in sensory neurons, yet only GABAA receptors decorated the neuronal surface. GABA receptors were not found on SGCs. Six days after injection of AdGAD65 into the trigeminal ganglion, there was a statistically significant decrease of pain behavior in the orofacial formalin test, a model of inflammatory pain. Rats injected with control virus (AdGFP or AdLacZ) had no reduction in their pain behavior. AdGAD65-dependent analgesia was blocked by bicuculline, a selective GABAA receptor antagonist, but not by CGP46381, a selective GABAB receptor antagonist. CONCLUSION: Transfection of glial cells in the trigeminal ganglion with the GAD gene blocks pain behavior by acting on GABAA receptors on neuronal perikarya.
Author information
Author/s: Vit, Jean-Philippe (JP); Ohara, Peter T (PT); Sundberg, Christopher (C); Rubi, Blanca (B); Maechler, Pierre (P); Liu, Chunyan (C); Puntel, Mariana (M); Lowenstein, Pedro (P); Castro, Maria (M); Jasmin, Luc (L);
Affiliation: Department of Anatomy, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA. Jeanpvit(-atsign-)gmail.com
Journal and publication information
Publication Type: Journal Article
Journal: Molecular pain (Mol Pain), published in England. (Language: eng)
Reference: 2009-; vol 5 (issue ) : pp 42
Dates: Created 2009/08/31; Completed 2009/11/03;
PMID: 19656360, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 11/3/2009, IMS Date: )
Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.
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