IPSE, a parasite-derived, host immunomodulatory infiltrin protein, alleviates resiniferatoxin-induced bladder pain.
Kenji IshidaEvaristus C MbanefoLoc LeOlivia LamannaLuke F PenningtonJulia C FinkelTheodore S JardetzkyFranco H FalconeMichael H HsiehPublished in: Molecular pain (2021)
The transient receptor potential cation channel subfamily V member 1 (TRPV1) receptor is an important mediator of nociception and its expression is enriched in nociceptive neurons. TRPV1 signaling has been implicated in bladder pain and is a potential analgesic target. Resiniferatoxin is the most potent known agonist of TRPV1. Acute exposure of the rat bladder to resiniferatoxin has been demonstrated to result in pain-related freezing and licking behaviors that are alleviated by virally encoded IL-4. The interleukin-4-inducing principle of Schistosoma mansoni eggs (IPSE) is a powerful inducer of IL-4 secretion, and is also known to alter host cell transcription through a nuclear localization sequence-based mechanism. We previously reported that IPSE ameliorates ifosfamide-induced bladder pain in an IL-4- and nuclear localization sequence-dependent manner. We hypothesized that pre-administration of IPSE to resiniferatoxin-challenged mice would dampen pain-related behaviors. IPSE indeed lessened resiniferatoxin-triggered freezing behaviors in mice. This was a nuclear localization sequence-dependent phenomenon, since administration of a nuclear localization sequence mutant version of IPSE abrogated IPSE's analgesic effect. In contrast, IPSE's analgesic effect did not seem IL-4-dependent, since use of anti-IL-4 antibody in mice given both IPSE and resiniferatoxin did not significantly affect freezing behaviors. RNA-Seq analysis of resiniferatoxin- and IPSE-exposed bladders revealed differential expression of TNF/NF-κb-related signaling pathway genes. In vitro testing of IPSE uptake by urothelial cells and TRPV1-expressing neuronal cells showed uptake by both cell types. Thus, IPSE's nuclear localization sequence-dependent therapeutic effects on TRPV1-mediated bladder pain may act on TRPV1-expressing neurons and/or may rely upon urothelial mechanisms.
Keyphrases
- neuropathic pain
- spinal cord injury
- spinal cord
- chronic pain
- single cell
- signaling pathway
- rna seq
- pain management
- induced apoptosis
- urinary tract
- drug induced
- oxidative stress
- high fat diet induced
- magnetic resonance
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- amino acid
- stem cells
- computed tomography
- cell therapy
- metabolic syndrome
- wild type
- cell cycle arrest
- liver failure
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- insulin resistance
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- mouse model
- hepatitis b virus
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- brain injury
- nuclear factor
- high glucose
- long non coding rna
- magnetic resonance imaging
- postoperative pain