Abstract

Neuropathic pain is one of the most severe forms of chronic pain caused by the direct injury of the somatosensory system. The current drugs for treating neuropathies have limited efficacies or show important side effects, and the development of analgesics with novel modes of action is critical. The identification of endogenous anti-nociceptive factors has emerged as an attractive strategy for designing new pharmacological approaches to treat neuropathic pain. Cortistatin is a neuropeptide with potent anti-inflammatory activity, recently identified as a natural analgesic peptide in several models of pain evoked by inflammatory conditions. Here, we investigated the potential analgesic effect of cortistatin in neuropathic pain using a variety of experimental models of peripheral nerve injury caused by chronic constriction or partial transection of the sciatic nerve or by diabetic neuropathy. We found that the peripheral and central injection of cortistatin ameliorated hyperalgesia and allodynia, two of the dominant clinical manifestations of chronic neuropathic pain. Cortistatin-induced analgesia was multitargeted, as it regulated the nerve damage-induced hypersensitization of primary nociceptors, inhibited neuroinflammatory responses, and enhanced the production of neurotrophic factors both at the peripheral and central levels. We also demonstrated the neuroregenerative/protective capacity of cortistatin in a model of severe peripheral nerve transection. Interestingly, the nociceptive system responded to nerve injury by secreting cortistatin, and a deficiency in cortistatin exacerbated the neuropathic pain responses and peripheral nerve dysfunction. Therefore, cortistatin-based therapies emerge as attractive alternatives for treating chronic neuropathic pain of different etiologies.

Highlights

  • IntroductionClinical neuropathic pain represents a frequent and serious global public health issue that affects between 7 and 10% of the population worldwide [1], and this percentage is expected to rise in the decades [2]

  • The initial neurogenic phase is caused by direct activation of nociceptors via Aδ and C-fibers, whereas the second tonic phase appears to be dependent on the combination of an inflammatory reaction in the peripheral tissue and functional changes in neurons of the dorsal horn spinal cord, which become sensitized to nociceptive stimuli [36]

  • In order to discriminate the site of action for cortistatin, we used three routes of cortistatin administration: systemic (i.p.), peripheral (i.pl.), and central (i.t. by lumbar puncture)

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical neuropathic pain represents a frequent and serious global public health issue that affects between 7 and 10% of the population worldwide [1], and this percentage is expected to rise in the decades [2]. It is estimated that around 40% of patients attending pain clinics for treatment exhibit neuropathic symptoms. Neuropathic pain is a consequence of nerve injury caused by direct trauma of the nerve, tumor growth or therapy, nerve compression, or autoimmune and metabolic disorders such as diabetes [3,4].

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