Abstract
The mechanisms involved in tachykinin-induced neurokinin-1 (NK(1)) receptor-mediated edema formation have been studied in anesthetized wild-type and NK(1) knockout mice. Intradermally injected substance P (30-300 pmol), NK(1) agonists septide (3-30 pmol) and GR-73632 (3-30 pmol), and the mast cell-degranulating agent, compound 48/80 induced dose-dependent edema in wild-type skin, measured by the accumulation of intravenously injected (125)I-labeled albumin. Septide was 3-10x more potent than substance P. The tachykinins were inactive in knockout mice, but compound 48/80 induced a significantly greater edema (P < 0.05) than that observed in paired wild-type mice. Capsaicin (which releases endogenous neuropeptides) and exogenous tachykinins induced edema formation, which was reduced by the mast cell amine histamine H(1) antagonist mepyramine (P < 0.05). These findings confirm that tachykinins mediate edema formation via the NK(1) receptor and provide direct evidence that the septide-sensitive binding site is on the NK(1) receptor. Furthermore, results suggest that edema induced by the tachykinins, although totally dependent on NK(1) receptor-mediated mechanism, contains a mast cell-dependent component. The evidence is in keeping with an NK(1) receptor on mast cells.
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