4.2 Article

TRPV1 is a Responding Channel for Acupuncture Manipulation in Mice Peripheral and Central Nerve System

Journal

CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY AND BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 49, Issue 5, Pages 1813-1824

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000493627

Keywords

Acupuncture; Dorsal root ganglion; Spinal cord; TRPV1; PERK; PNR1

Funding

  1. Chinese Medicine Research Center, China Medical University from The Featured Areas Research Center Program
  2. MOST [107-2320-B-039-033]

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Background/Aims: Acupuncture involves inserting a fine needle into a specific point, often called an acupoint, thereby initiating a therapeutic effect accompanied by phenomena such as soreness, heaviness, fullness, and numbness. Acupoints are characterized as points located in deep tissues with abundant sensory nerve terminals, which suggests that there is a strong relationship between acupoints and peripheral sensory afferents. In this study, we determined whether manual acupuncture (MA) or different frequencies of electroacupuncture (EA) share similar mechanisms for activating excitatory neurotransmission. Methods: We performed MA or EA at acupoint ST36 and we also used western blot and immunostaining techniques to determine neural changes at the peripheral dorsal root ganglion (DRG), spinal cord (SC), and somatosensory cortex (SSC) levels. Results: Our results show that either MA or EA at the ST36 acupoint significantly increased components of the TRPV1-related signaling pathway, such as pPKA, pPI3K, pPKC-pERK, and pAKT (but not pp38 or pJNK) at the peripheral DRG and central SC-SSC levels. Furthermore, excitatory phosphorylated N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (pNMDA) and pCaMKII alpha (but not pNR2B, pCaMKII delta, or pCaMKII gamma) also increased. These molecules could not increase in the DRG and SC-SSC of TRPV1(-/-)mice. Conclusion: Our data demonstrates that both MA and EA can activate excitatory signals in either peripheral or central levels. We also define that TRPV1 is crucial for an acupuncture effect and then initiate excitatory pNR1-pCaMKII pathway, at peripheral DRG and central SC-SSC level. We suggest that the TRPV1 signaling pathway is highly correlated to Acupuncture effect that implies the real clinical significance. (C) 2018 The Author(s) Published by S. Karger AG, Basel

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