4.6 Review

TRPA1 Antagonists for Pain Relief

Journal

PHARMACEUTICALS
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ph11040117

Keywords

inflammatory pain; neuropathic pain; nociceptive primary afferent nerve fiber; peripheral diabetic neuropathy; spinal cord; transient receptor potential ankyrin 1

Funding

  1. OrionPharma (Turku, Finland)
  2. Sigrid Juselius Foundation (Helsinki, Finland)
  3. Academy of Finland [137795, 315043]
  4. Academy of Finland (AKA) [315043, 137795, 315043, 137795] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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Here, we review the literature assessing the role of transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 (TRPA1), a calcium-permeable non-selective cation channel, in various types of pain conditions. In the nervous system, TRPA1 is expressed in a subpopulation of nociceptive primary sensory neurons, astroglia, oligodendrocytes and Schwann cells. In peripheral terminals of nociceptive primary sensory neurons, it is involved in the transduction of potentially harmful stimuli and in their central terminals it is involved in amplification of nociceptive transmission. TRPA1 is a final common pathway for a large number of chemically diverse pronociceptive agonists generated in various pathophysiological pain conditions. Thereby, pain therapy using TRPA1 antagonists can be expected to be a superior approach when compared with many other drugs targeting single nociceptive signaling pathways. In experimental animal studies, pharmacological or genetic blocking of TRPA1 has effectively attenuated mechanical and cold pain hypersensitivity in various experimental models of pathophysiological pain, with only minor side effects, if any TRPA1 antagonists acting peripherally are likely to be optimal for attenuating primary hyperalgesia (such as inflammation-induced sensitization of peripheral nerve terminals), while centrally acting TRPA1 antagonists are expected to be optimal for attenuating pain conditions in which central amplification of transmission plays a role (such as secondary hyperalgesia and tactile allodynia caused by various types of peripheral injuries). In an experimental model of peripheral diabetic neuropathy, prolonged blocking of TRPA1 has delayed the loss of nociceptive nerve endings and their function, thereby promising to provide a disease-modifying treatment.

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