ABSTRACT
The role of ECM-degrading proteinases in normal developmental processes and in pathological conditions is extensively studied. However, few reports describe the role ECM-degrading proteinases play in modulating hyperalgesia. The goal of this study is to describe the regulation of gelatinases during endotoxin mediated local inflammation, induced by intra plantar endotoxin (ET; 1.25 microg/50 microl) injection in Balb/c mice, and to correlate that with hyperalgesia. ET injections induced hyperalgesia, as determined by hot plate and paw pressure tests, which peaked by 24 h and recovered by 48 h post-injection. Contralateral paw of ET injected mice and saline injected paws in control mice elicited no hyperalgesia. Zymography showed that ET and saline injected paws elicited increased gelatinase activity by 9 h after injection. However, only the former maintained high levels of expression of a 90 kD gelatinase up to at least 96 h post ET injection, while in the latter gelatinase expression was down regulated by 24 h. Interestingly, the 90-kD gelatinase was upregulated in the contralateral paw of the ET-injected mice beyond 48 h post injection. Saline injection in that paw, during a time when gelatinases are upregulated, induced hyperalgesia. Intraperitoneal injection of either ZnCl(2) (100 microM), thymulin (5 microg/100 microl), or morphine (2 mg/kg/100 microl) reversed the ET-induced hyperalgesia and suppressed gelatinase activity. Furthermore, intraperitoneal injection of MPI, an ECM-degrading proteinase inhibitor, reversed ET induced hyperalgesia. Taken together, the above suggests that a functional interplay exists between gelatinase upregulation triggered by ET injections and hyperalgesia. The exact mechanism underlying such correlation remains to be determined.