A protein called RGS4 (Regulator of G protein signaling 4) plays a
prominent role in the maintenance of long-term pain states and may serve
as a promising new target for the treatment of chronic pain conditions,
according to research conducted at the Icahn School of Medicine at
Mount Sinai and published in print October 16, in The Journal of Neuroscience.
The discovery may help doctors stop acute pain from progressing into
chronic pain, a condition in which patients experience not just pain,
but a number of debilitating symptoms ranging from sensory deficits to
depression and loss of motivation. The transition from acute to chronic
(pathological) pain is accompanied by numerous adaptations in immune,
glial, and neuronal cells, many of which are still not well understood.
As a result, currently available medications for neuropathic or chronic
inflammatory pain show limited efficacy and major side effects. Commonly
administered opioids provide temporary alleviation of some pain
symptoms, but carry serious risks like addiction in the context of
long-term treatment for chronic pain. Therefore, there is an imminent
need for novel approaches towards the treatment of chronic pain and for
the development of medications that disrupt pain states instead of
simply alleviating symptoms.
“Our research reveals that RGS4 actions contribute to the transition
from acute and sub-acute pain to pathological pain states and to the
maintenance of pain,” says Venetia Zachariou, PhD, Professor in the Nash
Family Department of Neuroscience, the Department of Pharmacological
Sciences and The Friedman Brain Institute at the Icahn School of
Medicine at Mount Sinai. “Because chronic pain states affect numerous
neurochemical processes and single-target drugs are unlikely to work,
it’s exciting to have discovered a multifunctional protein that can be
targeted to disrupt the maintenance of pain.”
RGS4 is a multifunctional protein widely expressed in brain circuits
that processes pathological pain, mood, and motivation. Through this
study, Mount Sinai researchers observed that RGS4 plays an important
role in maintaining pain states, regardless of whether the cause of pain
was nerve injury or inflammation. Using genetic mouse models to ablate
the gene expressing RGS4, the team demonstrated that prevention of RGS4
action disrupts the maintenance of chronic pain states in male and
female mice.
Specifically, the research team used genetically modified mice to
understand the role of RGS4 in the induction, intensity, and maintenance
of chronic pain symptoms. They found that while genetic inactivation of
RGS4 does not affect acute pain or the induction of chronic pain, it
promotes recovery from sensory hypersensitivity symptoms in preclinical
models of peripheral nerve injury, chemotherapy-induced neuropathy, and
peripheral inflammation. Mice lacking RGS4 developed all expected
symptoms of nerve injury, but they recovered within 3 weeks. Prevention
of RGS4 action was also associated with an increase in
motivation-related behaviors.
The group also used genetic tools to reduce the expression of RGS4 in
the ventral-posterior lateral nucleus of the thalamus, a pain
processing center that receives input from the spinal cord and relays
this information to several cortical areas. Ultimately, inhibition of
RGS4 actions in brain region resulted in recovery from mechanical and
cold allodynia. Additionally, the research team used next-generation
sequencing to gain insight on the genes and intracellular pathways
affected by RGS4. The lab is further investigating the actions of RGS4
in the spinal cord and in mood-regulating areas of the brain to better
understand the mechanism by which this protein affects sensory and
affective pain symptoms.
Dr. Zachariou’s laboratory is conducting further investigation into
the actions of RGS4 in the spinal cord and mood-regulating areas of the
brain to better understand the mechanism by which this protein affects
sensory and affective pain symptoms. They are also testing the
therapeutic potential of RGS4 inhibitors.
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-10/tmsh-rib101019.php
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