4.6 Article

An objective approach to assess colonic pain in mice using colonometry

期刊

PLOS ONE
卷 16, 期 3, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0245410

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资金

  1. National Institute of Health [NIH R01 DK118137, P30 DA033934]
  2. Commonwealth Health Research Board [CHRB 236-06-18]
  3. VCU Institutional Career Development Core [CTSA 5KL2TR002648]

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This study introduces a non-surgical method, colonometry, to assess colonic mechanical sensitivity in mice. The results show that colonometry can be utilized to analyze colonic hypersensitivity, where increased strength of colonic stretch-reflex contraction and decreased threshold of colonic mechanical sensation were observed. Chemogenetic intervention was effective in reducing hypersensitivity symptoms.
The present study presents a non-surgical approach to assess colonic mechanical sensitivity in mice using colonometry, a technique in which colonic stretch-reflex contractions are measured by recording intracolonic pressures during saline infusion into the distal colon in a constant rate. Colonometrical recording has been used to assess colonic function in healthy individuals and patients with neurological disorders. Here we found that colonometry can also be implemented in mice, with an optimal saline infusion rate of 1.2 mL/h. Colonometrograms showed intermittent pressure rises that was caused by periodical colonic contractions. In the sceneries of colonic hypersensitivity that was generated post 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS)-induced colonic inflammation, following chemogenetic activation of primary afferent neurons, or immediately after noxious stimulation of the colon by colorectal distension (CRD), the amplitude of intracolonic pressure (A(ICP)) was markedly elevated which was accompanied by a faster pressure rising (Delta P/Delta t). Colonic hypersensitivity-associated A(ICP) elevation was a result of the enhanced strength of colonic stretch-reflex contraction which reflected the heightened activity of the colonic sensory reflex pathways. The increased value of Delta P/Delta t in colonic hypersensitivity indicated a lower threshold of colonic mechanical sensation by which colonic stretch-reflex contraction was elicited by a smaller saline infusion volume during a shorter period of infusion time. Chemogenetic inhibition of primary afferent pathway that was governed by Nav1.8-expressing cells attenuated TNBS-induced up-regulations of A(ICP), Delta P/Delta t, and colonic pain behavior in response to CRD. These findings support that colonometrograms can be used for analysis of colonic pain in mice.

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