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Papers of the Week


Papers: 26 Oct 2019 - 1 Nov 2019


Animal Studies


2019 Jan-Dec


Mol Pain


15

NPY2R signaling gates spontaneous and mechanical, but not thermal, pain transmission.

Authors

Chen S, Liu X, Jiao Y, Chen Z F, Yu W
Mol Pain. 2019 Jan-Dec; 15:1744806919887830.
PMID: 31646939.

Abstract

Neuropeptide Y (NPY) signaling plays an important role in inhibiting chronic pain in the spinal cord of mice. However, little is known about the respective roles of two major NPY receptors, Y1R and Y2R, in evoked, and spontaneous, pain behavior under normal physiological condition. Using intrathecal (i.t.) administration approach, we found that pharmacological inhibition of Y2R, unexpectedly, gave rise to spontaneous pain behavior. In addition, Y2R antagonism also resulted in long-lasting mechanical but not thermal hypersensitivity. By contrast, no overt spontaneous pain behavior, nor mechanical and thermal hypersensitivity were detected after pharmacological inhibition of Y1R. Remarkably, activation of Y1R produced powerful analgesic effect: blocking both evoked and spontaneous pain behavior resulted from Y2R antagonism. These findings highlight the pivotal role of endogenous Y2R in gating mechanical and spontaneous pain transmission. Importantly, our results suggest that Y1R could be a therapeutic target that may be exploited for alleviating spontaneous pain without affecting acute pain transmission.