Stauntonia chinensis injection relieves neuropathic pain by increasing the expression of PSD-95 and reducing the proliferation of phagocytic microglia
Wenwen Deng, Helin Zou, Li Qian, Senio Campos de Souza, Qian Chen, Song Cao
Stauntonia chinensis injection relieves neuropathic pain by increasing the expression of PSD-95 and reducing the proliferation of phagocytic microglia
Neuroinflammation induced by engulfment of synapses by phagocytic microglia plays a crucial role in neuropathic pain. Stauntonia chinensis is extracted from Stauntonia chinensis DC, which has been used as a traditional Chinese medicine to control trigeminal neuralgia or sciatica. However, the specific anti-neuralgia mechanism of Stauntonia chinensis is unknown. In this study, the analgesic effect of Stauntonia chinensis injection (SCI) in mice with neuropathic pain and the possible mechanisms are explored. We find that a local injection of 0.1 mL Stauntonia chinensis for 14 days can considerably relieve mechanical hyperalgesia and thermal hyperalgesia in mice with sciatic chronic constriction injury (CCI). Immunofluorescence staining shows that SCI reduces neuroinflammation in the spinal cord of CCI mice. RNA sequencing reveals that the expression of postsynaptic density protein 95 (PSD-95), a postsynaptic scaffold protein, is downregulated in the spinal cord of CCI mice, but upregulated after SCI administration. Immunofluorescence experiments also demonstrate that SCI administration reverses microglia proliferation and PSD-95 downregulation in CCI mice. These data suggest that SCI relieves neuropathic pain by increasing the expression of PSD-95 and reducing the proliferation of phagocytic microglia.
microglia / neuroinflammation / neuropathic pain / PSD-95 / Stauntonia chinensis injection
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