Abstract

Nitric oxide (NO) is thought to be involved in the central mechanism of hyperalgesia and allodynia at the spinal level. Recently, we reported that NO played an important role in the induction of long-term potentiation (LTP) of synaptic strength in spinal dorsal horn, which is believed to underlie hyperalgesia and allodynia. In this study, to elucidate the relationship of NO to LTP in spinal dorsal horn, we measured the spatiotemporal distribution of NO signal with the NO-sensitive dye, DAR-4M, and neuronal excitation with the voltage-sensitive dye, RH482, in rat spinal cord slices, elicited by dorsal root stimulation. In superficial dorsal horn, neuronal excitation evoked by C fiber-activating dorsal root stimulation was potentiated for more than 2 h after low-frequency conditioning stimulation (LFS, 240 pulses at 2 Hz for 2 min). In the same slices that exhibited LTP, NO was produced and distributed in the superficial dorsal horn during the delivery of LFS, and the amplitude of LTP and amount of NO production showed close correlation from slice to slice. LTP and production of NO were inhibited in the presence of the NO synthase inhibitors and an inhibitor of heme oxygenase, the synthetic enzyme for carbon monoxide (CO). These results suggest that production and distribution of NO is necessary for the induction of LTP in spinal dorsal horn, and that CO contributes to the LTP induction and NO production by LFS.

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