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Anti-nociceptive action of peripheral mu-opioid receptors by G-beta-gamma protein-mediated inhibition of TRPM3 channels.

Sandeep DemblaMarc BehrendtFlorian MohrChristian GoeckeJulia SondermannFranziska M SchneiderMarlene SchmidtJulia StabRaissa EnzerothMichael G LeitnerPaulina Nuñez-BadinezJochen SchwenkBernd NürnbergAlejandro CohenStephan E PhilippWolfgang GreffrathMoritz BünemannDominik OliverEleonora ZakharianManuela SchmidtJohannes Oberwinkler
Published in: eLife (2017)
Opioids, agonists of µ-opioid receptors (µORs), are the strongest pain killers clinically available. Their action includes a strong central component, which also causes important adverse effects. However, µORs are also found on the peripheral endings of nociceptors and their activation there produces meaningful analgesia. The cellular mechanisms downstream of peripheral µORs are not well understood. Here, we show in neurons of murine dorsal root ganglia that pro-nociceptive TRPM3 channels, present in the peripheral parts of nociceptors, are strongly inhibited by µOR activation, much more than other TRP channels in the same compartment, like TRPV1 and TRPA1. Inhibition of TRPM3 channels occurs via a short signaling cascade involving Gβγ proteins, which form a complex with TRPM3. Accordingly, activation of peripheral µORs in vivo strongly attenuates TRPM3-dependent pain. Our data establish TRPM3 inhibition as important consequence of peripheral µOR activation indicating that pharmacologically antagonizing TRPM3 may be a useful analgesic strategy.
Keyphrases
  • neuropathic pain
  • pain management
  • chronic pain
  • chemotherapy induced
  • spinal cord
  • spinal cord injury
  • anti inflammatory
  • binding protein