Abstract

Recent findings suggested that Clinical Endocannabinoid Deficiency underlies the pathophysiology of pain disorders, including migraine and headache. In models of medication overuse headache induced by sustained administration of sumatriptan or morphine, 2-AG levels were selectively depleted in the periaqueductal gray (PAG) and anandamide (AEA) increased in the cortex suggesting distinct regulation of the endocannabinoid system during headache pain. These results led to the hypothesis that blockade of DAGL, to reduce 2-AG levels would induce headache-like behaviors as a new, translationally relevant model of episodic headache. Our study investigated whether non-selective and selective blockade of DAGL, the main biosynthetic enzyme for 2-AG, induced periorbital and hind-paw allodynia, photophobia, anxiety-like behaviors, responsivity to abortive anti-migraine agents, and 2-AG/AEA levels. Injection of non-selective DAGL (DH376, 10 mg/kg, IP) and selective DAGLα (LEI106, 20 mg/kg, IP) inhibitors, but not DAGLβ agents, induced facial sensitivity in 100% and ∼60% of female and male rats, respectively, without induction of peripheral sensitivity. Notably, male rats showed significantly less sensitivity than female rats after DAGLα inhibition, suggesting sexual dimorphism in this mechanism. Importantly, LEI106 induced periorbital allodynia was attenuated by administration of the clinically available abortive antimigraine agents, sumatriptan and olcegepant. Selective DAGLα inhibition induced significant photophobia as measured by the light-dark box, without anxiety like behaviors or changes in voluntary movement. Analysis of AEA and 2-AG levels at the time of peak pain sensitivity revealed reductions in 2-AG in the visual cortex and periaqueductal gray (PAG), without altering anandamide or significantly increasing diacylglycerol levels. These results provide foundational evidence for DAGL-2AG in the induction of headache-like pain and photophobia without extracephalic allodynia, thus modeling the clinical episodic migraine. Mechanistically, behavioral measures of headache sensitivity after DAGL inhibition suggests that reduced 2-AG signaling in the cortex and PAG, but not the trigeminal nucleus caudalis or trigeminal ganglia, drives headache initiation. Therefore, episodic DAGL inhibition, which reduces the time, cost, and invasiveness of currently accepted models of headache, may fill the need for episodic migraine/headache models mirroring clinical presentation. Moreover, use of this approach may provide an avenue to study the transition from episodic to chronic headache.

Highlights

  • Headache disorders, including migraine and tension-type headache (TTH), affect nearly 46% of the global population (Stovner et al, 2007; IHS, 2018)

  • While the exact pathophysiology of these disorders has yet to be elucidated, recent findings have suggested that the endocannabinoid system may play an important role

  • The endocannabinoid system (eCB) system comprises the small lipid signalers, 2-AG and AEA, which are primarily synthesized from the cellular lipid membrane via the enzymes diacylglycerol lipase (DAGL) and N-acyl-phosphatidylethanolamine hydrolyzing phospholipase D (NAPE-PLD), respectively (Ahn et al, 2008; Fezza et al, 2016)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Headache disorders, including migraine and tension-type headache (TTH), affect nearly 46% of the global population (Stovner et al, 2007; IHS, 2018). A second line of DAGLα knockout mice revealed that cerebellum, hippocampus and striatum showed the lowest level of 2-AG; no appreciable changes in central 2-AG were observed in the DAGLβ knockout mice (Gao et al, 2010; Tanimura et al, 2010). Based on the theory of CED and the therapeutic potential of elevated eCB tone in headache models (Lau et al, 2014; Nozaki et al, 2015; Zubrzycki et al, 2017; Greco et al, 2018b; Greco et al, 2020), we hypothesized that decreased levels of endocannabinoids, mainly 2-AG via exogenous inhibition of DAGL can induce migraine-like pain, and it can be utilized as a viable preclinical model for investigating headache-like pain. DAGL inhibition represents a new strategy to study headache that recapitulates the clinical features of headache and/or migraine as a reverse translational strategy to model CED

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