The Journal of Pain
Volume 11, Issue 4 , Pages 321-329, April 2010

Differential Roles of Peripheral Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors in Bee Venom-Induced Nociception and Inflammation in Conscious Rats

Department of Neurology, General Hospital of Shen-Yang Military Region, Shenyang 110016, P. R. China

Received 22 December 2008; received in revised form 3 June 2009; accepted 30 July 2009. published online 23 October 2009.

Abstract 

Intraplantar injection of bee venom (BV) produces persistent spontaneous nociception (PSN), hyperalgesia, and inflammatory swelling of the injected paw. The present study was designed to determine the roles of peripheral metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) in BV-induced nociception and inflammation. We determined the effects of the group I mGluR antagonist AIDA, the group II mGluR agonist ADPC, and the group III mGluR agonist L-AP4 on BV-induced PSN, mechanical hyperalgesia, and inflammatory swelling. Pretreatment with intraplantar injections of AIDA, ADPC or L-AP4 at different doses significantly inhibited BV-induced PSN over the 1-hour observational period. The inhibitory effects of ADPC and L-AP4 were completely abolished by pretreatment with the group II mGluR antagonist LY341495 and the group III mGluR antagonist MSOP, respectively. Pretreatment with ADPC prevented the BV-induced decrease in paw-withdrawal mechanical threshold (PWMT) in a dose-dependent manner, while pretreatment with AIDA or L-AP4 had no effect. The antihyperalgesic effect of ADPC was completely abolished by pretreatment with LY341495. Pretreatment with AIDA, ADPC or L-AP4 at different doses had no effect on the BV-induced increase in the paw volume (PV), a measurement of inflammatory swelling. All contralateral drug treatments at the highest doses had no effect on BV-induced PSN, decreases in PWMT or increases in PV, eliminating the possibility of drug-induced systemic effects. These data suggest that the activation of mGluRs in the periphery may play a differential role in BV-induced nociception and inflammation.

Perspective

The present study demonstrated that the intraplantar injection of antagonists or agonists of different mGluRs produced differential effects on bee venom-induced persistent spontaneous nociception and mechanical hyperalgesia. However, no effects on inflammation were observed, suggesting that mGluRs in the periphery have differential roles. Thus, therapies specifically targeting metabotropic glutamate receptors may improve the treatment of patients with persistent spontaneous nociception and hyperalgesia.

Key words: Bee venom, mGluRs, persistent spontaneous nociception, hyperalgesia, inflammation

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 Supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (30471667) and Postdoctoral Science Foundation of P. R. China (2005037760; both to H.S.C.).

PII: S1526-5900(09)00664-6

doi:10.1016/j.jpain.2009.07.013

The Journal of Pain
Volume 11, Issue 4 , Pages 321-329, April 2010