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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38352565

ABSTRACT

Much is understood about the structure and gating properties of NMDA receptors (NMDAR), but the function of the carboxy-terminal splice variant of the NR1 subunit, NR1 C2 has never been identified. By studying the scaffolding protein Magi-2 in animal models of inflammatory pain, we discovered how NR1 C2 protein is specifically regulated. We found that Magi-2 deficiency resulted in decreased pain behavior and a concomitant reduction in NR1 C2 protein. Magi-2 contains WW domains, domains typically found in ubiquitin ligases. We identified an atypical WW-binding domain within NR1 C2 which conferred susceptibility to Nedd4-1 ubiquitin-ligase dependent degradation. We used lipidated peptidomimetics derived from the NR1 C2 sequence and found that NR1 C2 protein levels and pain behavior can be pharmacologically targeted. The function of NR1 C2 is to give lability to a pool of NMDAR, important for pain signaling.

2.
Neurobiol Pain ; 10: 100079, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34917858

ABSTRACT

Chronic constriction injuries (CCI) of the sciatic nerve are widely used nerve entrapment animal models of neuropathic pain. Two common pain behaviors observed following CCI are thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia, measured by the Hargreaves and von Frey tests, respectively. While thermal hyperalgesia tends to recover by 30 days, mechanical allodynia can persist for many more months thereafter. Consequently, mechanical allodynia has been used extensively as a measure of 'chronic pain' focusing on the circuitry changes that occur within the spinal cord. Here, using the sciatic nerve cuff variant of CCI in mice, we propose that in contrast to these evoked measures of nociceptive hypersensitivity, dynamic weight bearing provides a more clinically relevant behavioral measure for ongoing pain during nerve injury. We found that the effect of sciatic nerve cuff on the ratio of weight bearing by the injured relative to uninjured hindlimbs more closely resembled that of thermal hyperalgesia, following a trend toward recovery by 30 days. We also found an increase in the percent of body weight bearing by the contralateral paw that is not seen in the previously tested behaviors. These results demonstrate that dynamic weight bearing is a reliable measure of non-evoked neuropathic pain and suggest that thermal hyperalgesia, rather than mechanical allodynia, provides a proxy measure for nerve entrapment-induced ongoing pain.

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