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      Proteinase-activated receptor-2 and hyperalgesia: A novel pain pathway.

      Nature medicine
      Animals, Gene Expression Regulation, drug effects, Genes, fos, Hyperalgesia, metabolism, Inflammation, Male, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Pain, Prostaglandins, physiology, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Receptor, PAR-2, Receptors, Neurokinin-1, genetics, Receptors, Thrombin, agonists, Spinal Cord, Substance P

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          Abstract

          Using a combined pharmacological and gene-deletion approach, we have delineated a novel mechanism of neurokinin-1 (NK-1) receptor-dependent hyperalgesia induced by proteinase-activated receptor-2 (PAR2), a G-protein-coupled receptor expressed on nociceptive primary afferent neurons. Injections into the paw of sub-inflammatory doses of PAR2 agonists in rats and mice induced a prolonged thermal and mechanical hyperalgesia and elevated spinal Fos protein expression. This hyperalgesia was markedly diminished or absent in mice lacking the NK-1 receptor, preprotachykinin-A or PAR2 genes, or in rats treated with a centrally acting cyclooxygenase inhibitor or treated by spinal cord injection of NK-1 antagonists. Here we identify a previously unrecognized nociceptive pathway with important therapeutic implications, and our results point to a direct role for proteinases and their receptors in pain transmission.

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