Curcumin relieves oxaliplatin-induced neuropathic pain via reducing inflammation and activating antioxidant response.
Meng-Wei ZhangXu SunYi-Wen XuWei MengQiong TangHui GaoLing LiuShao-Hui ChenPublished in: Cell biology international (2024)
Oxaliplatin (OXA) has shown high effectiveness in the treatment of cancers, but its anticancer clinical effects often induce neurotoxicity leading to neuropathic pain. Oxidative damage and NLRP3 inflammasome play important roles in neuropathic pain development. Here, neuropathic pain mouse model was constructed by continuous intraperitoneal injection of OXA. OXA administration induced mechanical pain, spontaneous pain, thermal hyperalgesia and motor disability in mice. The spinal cord tissues of OXA mice exhibited the suppressed antioxidative response, the activated NLRP3 inflammasome mediated inflammatory responses, and the increased GSK-3β activity. Next, we injected curcumin (CUR) intraperitoneally in OXA mice for seven consecutive days. CUR-treated mice showed increased mechanical pain thresholds, reduced number of spontaneous flinches, increased paw withdrawal latency, and restored latency to fall. While in the spinal cord, CUR treatment inhibited the NLRP3 inflammasome mediated inflammatory response, increased Nrf2/GPX4-mediated antioxidant responses, and decreased mitochondrial oxidative generation. Additionally, CUR combined with GSK-3β through four covalent bonds and reduced GSK-3β activity. In conclusion, our findings suggest that CUR treatment inhibits GSK-3β activation, increases Nrf2 mediated antioxidant responses, inhibits oxidative damage and inflammatory reaction, and alleviates OXA-induced neuropathic pain.
Keyphrases
- neuropathic pain
- spinal cord
- nlrp inflammasome
- oxidative stress
- spinal cord injury
- acinetobacter baumannii
- diabetic rats
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- signaling pathway
- inflammatory response
- high fat diet induced
- mouse model
- high glucose
- multiple sclerosis
- pi k akt
- multidrug resistant
- anti inflammatory
- gene expression
- escherichia coli
- drug resistant
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- type diabetes
- drug induced
- chronic pain
- replacement therapy
- adipose tissue
- wastewater treatment
- wild type
- insulin resistance
- toll like receptor
- ultrasound guided