4.7 Article

CGRP Modulates Orofacial Pain through Mediating Neuron-Glia Crosstalk

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 100, Issue 1, Pages 98-105

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0022034520950296

Keywords

trigeminal ganglia; satellite glial cells; nitric oxide; calcium channels; lentivirus; RNA interference

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81571004, 81500884, 81400549]
  2. Applied and Fundamental Research Program - Department of Science and Technology of Sichuan Province [2018JY0558]
  3. Fundamental Research Fund for the Central Universities from Northwest Minzu University, China [31920160052]
  4. Research Grant of Health Commission of Sichuan Province [19PJ233, 20PJ090]

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CGRP is upregulated in trigeminal neurons and SGCs following orofacial pain induction. Knockdown of CGRP reduces pain and its expression in neurons and SGCs. CGRP upregulates inducible nitric oxide synthase in SGCs through p38 signaling pathway, leading to a positive-feedback neuron-glia crosstalk mediated by CGRP.
Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) plays a crucial role in the modulation of orofacial pain, and we hypothesized that CGRP mediated a neuron-glia crosstalk in orofacial pain. The objective of this study was to elucidate the mechanisms whereby CGRP mediated trigeminal neuron-glia crosstalk in modulating orofacial pain. Orofacial pain was elicited by ligating closed-coil springs between incisors and molars. Trigeminal neurons and satellite glial cells (SGCs) were cultured for mechanistic exploration. Gene and protein expression were determined through immunostaining, polymerase chain reaction, and Western blot. Orofacial pain was evaluated through the rat grimace scale. Our results revealed that the expressions of CGRP were elevated in both trigeminal neurons and SGCs following the induction of orofacial pain. Intraganglionic administration of CGRP and olcegepant exacerbated and alleviated orofacial pain, respectively. The knockdown of CGRP through viral vector-mediated RNA interference was able to downregulate CGRP expressions in both neurons and SGCs and to alleviate orofacial pain. CGRP upregulated the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase through the p38 signaling pathway in cultured SGCs. In turn, L-arginine (nitric oxide donor) was able to enhance orofacial pain by upregulating CGRP expressions in vivo. In cultured trigeminal neurons, L-arginine upregulated the expression of CGRP, and this effect was diminished by cilnidipine (N-type calcium channel blocker) while not by mibefradil (L-type calcium channel blocker). In conclusion, CGRP modulated orofacial pain through upregulating the expression of nitric oxide through the p38 signaling pathway in SGCs, and the resulting nitric oxide in turn stimulated CGRP expression through N-type calcium channel in neurons, building a CGRP-mediated positive-feedback neuron-glia crosstalk.

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