Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Nakamura Motonao
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 6000014705
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Role of leukotriene B(LTB4)-LTBreceptor 1 signaling in post-incisional nociceptive sensitization and local inflammation in mice

Bibliography Type

Joint Author

Author

Asahara,M., Ito,N., Hoshino,Y., Sasaki,T., Yokomizo,T., Nakamura,M., Shimizu,T., and Yamada,Y.

Summary

Leukotriene B4 (LTB4) is a potent lipid mediator involved in the recruitment and activation of neutrophils, which is an important feature of tissue injury and inflammation. The biological effects of LTB4 are primarily mediated through the high-affinity LTB4 receptor, BLT1. Postoperative incisional pain is characterized by persistent acute pain at the site of tissue injury and is associated with local inflammation. Here, we compared the role of LTB4-BLT1 signaling in postoperative incisional pain between BLT1-knockout (BLT1KO) and wild-type (BLT1WT) mice. A planter incision model was developed, and mechanical hyperalgesia was determined using the von Frey test before and after incision. Local infiltration of neutrophils and inflammatory monocytes was quantified by flow cytometry. Inflammatory cytokine levels in the incised tissue were also determined.
Mechanical hyperalgesia was significantly reduced in BLT1KO mice compared to BLT1WT mice at 2, 3, and 4 days after incision. LTBlevels in the tissue at the incision site peaked 3 hours after the incision. Infiltrated neutrophils peaked 1 day after the incision in both BLT1KO and BLT1WT mice. The accumulation of inflammatory monocytes increased 1–3 days after the incision and was significantly more reduced in BLT1KO mice than in BLT1WT mice. In BLT1KO mice, Interleukin-1β and Tumor Necrosis Factor-α levels 1 day after the incision were significantly lower than those of BLT1WT mice. Our data suggest that LTB4 is produced and activates its receptor BLT1 in the very early phase of tissue injury, and that LTB4-BLT1 signaling exacerbates pain responses by promoting local infiltration of inflammatory monocytes and cytokine production. Thus, LTB4-BLT1 signaling is a potential target for therapeutic intervention of acute and persistent pain induced by tissue injury.

Magazine(name)

PLOS ONE

Publisher

Volume

https//doi.org/10.1371/jornal.pone.0276135

Number Of Pages

StartingPage

EndingPage

Date of Issue

2022/07

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

ISSN

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PMID

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ORCID Put Code

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