Abstract

Treatment of chronic neuropathic pain resulted from peripheral nerve injury is one of the most difficult problems in modern clinical practice. The use of cell lines as biologic “minipumps” to chronically deliver anti-nociceptive molecules into the pain-processing centers of spinal cord is a newly developing technique for the treatment of pain. Moreover, spinal administration of exogenous galanin (GAL) is a useful target for the treatment of chronic pain after nerve injury. Because of better histocompatibility, lower immunogenicity and reproducibility, immortalized astrocytes (IAST) have been served as a promising cellular vehicle to deliver therapeutic molecules into CNS. In this study, the rat IAST was transfected with rat preprogalanin cDNA and the galanin-synthesizing and secreting cell line, IAST/GAL, was isolated. After cells were transplanted into the subarachnoid space of rats with chronic neuropathic pain induced by spared nerve injury (SNI) of sciatic nerve, their analgesic potential was evaluated by behavioral tests. The results showed that IAST/GAL transfected with preprogalanin gene could express and secrete significantly higher level of GAL protein in vitro and in vivo as compared with control cells. In addition, the pain-related behaviors, thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia were significantly alleviated during the 1–7 weeks after grafts of IAST/GAL cells, which could be reversed by galanin receptor antagonist M35 temporarily. Taken together, these data suggest that subarachnoid transplant of immortalized galanin-overexpressing astrocytes near the pain-processing centers was able to reverse the development of chronic neuropathic pain, which offers an adjunct approach to currently used therapies for the pain management.

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