Abstract

Recently, a novel cholinergic channel modulator, (R)-5-(2-azetidinylmethoxy)-2-chloropyridine (ABT-594), was shown to produce potent analgesia in a variety of rodent pain models when administered either systemically or centrally into the nucleus raphe magnus (NRM). The purpose of the present study was to investigate the possible supraspinal contribution of ABT-594 by assessing its ability to induce expression of the immediate early gene c-fos, a biochemical marker of neuronal activation, in the NRM of rats. Putative serotonergic neurons in the NRM, a medullary nucleus proposed to be involved in descending antinociceptive pathways, were identified immunohistochemically using a monoclonal antibody (mAb) against tryptophan hydroxylase. ABT-594 (0.03-0.3 micromol/kg, i.p.) produced a dose-dependent induction of Fos protein that was blocked by the central nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) antagonist mecamylamine (5 micromol/kg, i.p.) but not by the peripheral nAChR antagonist hexamethonium (15 micromol/kg, i.p.). Immunohistological studies using mAb 299 revealed the expression of alpha4-containing nAChRs in the NRM. The alpha4 immunostaining was dramatically reduced by pretreating (30 d) animals with the serotonin neurotoxin 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine (5,7-DHT), which was previously shown to substantially attenuate the antinociceptive actions of ABT-594. In a double immunohistochemical labeling experiment, coexpression of the serotonin marker tryptophan hxdroxylase and the alpha4 nAChR subunit in NRM neurons was observed. These results suggest that the analgesic mechanism of ABT-594 may in part involve the activation of the NRM, a site where alpha4-containing nAChRs are expressed by serotonergic neurons.

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