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. 2018 Aug-Dec:4:8-19.
doi: 10.1016/j.ynpai.2018.02.001. Epub 2018 Feb 23.

Therapeutic opportunities for pain medicines via targeting of specific translation signaling mechanisms

Affiliations

Therapeutic opportunities for pain medicines via targeting of specific translation signaling mechanisms

Salim Megat et al. Neurobiol Pain. 2018 Aug-Dec.

Abstract

As the population of the world ages and as more and more people survive diseases that used to be primary causes of mortality, the incidence of severe chronic pain in most of the world has risen dramatically. This type of pain is very difficult to treat and the opioid overdose epidemic that has become a leading cause of death in the United States and other parts of the world highlights the urgent need to develop new pain therapeutics. A common underlying cause of severe chronic pain is a phenotypic change in pain-sensing neurons in the peripheral nervous system called nociceptors. These neurons play a vital role in detecting potentially injurious stimuli, but when these neurons start to detect very low levels of inflammatory meditators or become spontaneously active, they send spurious pain signals to the brain that are significant drivers of chronic pain. An important question is what drives this phenotypic shift in nociceptors from quiescence under most conditions to sensitization to a broad variety of stimuli and spontaneous activity. The goal of this review is to discuss the critical role that specific translation regulation signaling pathways play in controlling gene expression changes that drive nociceptor sensitization and may underlie the development of spontaneous activity. The focus will be on advances in technologies that allow for identification of such targets and on developments in pharmacology around translation regulation signaling that may yield new pain therapeutics. A key advantage of pharmacological manipulation of these signaling events is that they may reverse phenotypic shifts in nociceptors that drive chronic pain thereby creating the first generation of disease modifying drugs for chronic pain.

Keywords: AMPK; MNK; Nociceptor; Sensitization; eIF4A; eIF4E; mTOR.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interest The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Phenotypic changes in DRG neurons associated with nerve injury and neuropathic pain A) Nerve injury can produce phenotypic changes leading to changes in expression for a variety of different peptides or proteins, including BDNF or CGRP. These include changes in expression in cells that already expressed these genes (brighter colors) or de novo expression in cells that did not previously express these genes. B) A second sort of phenotypic change involves altered translational control. For instance, after nerve injury Nav1.8 mRNA is increasingly trafficked into the axon and is locally translated at sites of injury contributing to altered excitability and potentially ectopic discharges.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Targeting strategies for mTORC1, Mnk1/2 and AMPK Summary diagram showing (A) mTORC1 regulation and its primary target mRNAs, (B) Mnk1/2 regulation and its primary target mRNAs and (C) AMPK mediated inhibition of mTOR and MAPK signaling.
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Targeting strategies for PABP and eIF4A Summary diagram showing targeting strategies for PABP (A) which is involved in regulation of poly-A tail length and mRNA circularization and (B) eIF4A which is an RNA helicase putatively involved in unwinding 5′ UTR G-quadruples structures.
Fig. 4
Fig. 4
Targeting strategies for eIF2α/Integrated Stress Response Summary diagram showing how eIF2α phosphorylation leads to disruption of cap-dependent translation and engagement of translation via non-canonical start sites in the 5′ UTR of mRNAs.

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