2 resultados para NEUROPEPTIDES

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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Diese Arbeit charakterisiert die Funktion und das Expressionmuster der beiden Zinkfinger-Homöodomänentranskriptionsfaktoren zfh1 und zfh2 von Drosophila melanogaster. Das zfh2 Gen wurde hierbei vor allem molekular charakterisiert. Es wurden eine Vielzahl möglicher Spleißformen identifiziert, welche das regulatorische Potential von Zfh2 enorm erweitern. Für Überexpressionsexperimente wurde zudem erstmalig die cDNA des längsten zfh2-Transkriptes kloniert. Durch Analysen an zfh1 Mutanten konnte gezeigt werden, dass zfh1 sowohl notwendig ist für die embryonale Entwicklung von Motoneuronen, als auch das larvale Wachstum motoneuronaler Endplatten reguliert. Wegen weit reichender pleiotroper Effekte, die zfh1 Funktionsverlustmutanten haben, war es notwendig, neben dem Einsatz hypomorpher Allele auf die Analyse genetischer Mosaike auszuweichen. Die als MARCM-Technik (Lee und Luo, 1999) bezeichnete Methode zur Erzeugung genetischer Mosaike wurde modifiziert um in dieser Arbeit erstmals für die Analyse mutanter larvaler Motoneurone eingesetzt werden zu können. Weitergehend konnte gezeigt werden, dass Zfh1 notwendig ist für die larvale Expression des Neuropeptides FMRFamid. Anhand von Sequenzvergleichen und durch Verwendung eines fmrfamid-Promoterkonstruktes (Benveniste et al., 1998) konnten Hinweise dafür gesammelt werden, dass die Zfh1-abhängige Regulation sehr wahrscheinlich direkter Natur ist. Bei fmrfamid handelt es sich somit um das erste identifizierte neurale Zielgen von Zfh1, an dem sich zudem modellhaft der molekulare Wirkmechanismus von Zfh1 erforschen lässt.

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Clinically, it is well known that neuropathic pain often induces comorbid symptoms such as anxiety. In turn, also anxiety has been associated with a heightened experience of pain. Although, the link between pain and anxiety is well recognized in humans, the neurobiological basis of this relationship remains unclear. Therefore, the aim of the current study was to investigate the influence of neuropathic pain on anxiety and vice versa in rats by assessing not only pain-related behaviour but also by discovering possible key substrates which are responsible for the interrelation of pain and anxiety.rnIn rats with a chronic constriction of the sciatic nerve (CCI model) anxiety-like behaviour was observed. Since anxiety behaviour could be completely abolished after the treatment of the pure analgesic drugs gabapentin and morphine, we concluded that anxiety was caused by the strong persistent pain. Furthermore, we found that the neuropeptides oxytocin and vasopressin were upregulated in the amygdala of CCI rats, and the intra-amygdala treatment of an oxytocin antagonist but not the vasopressin antagonist could reduce anxiety-like behaviour in these animals, while no effect on mechanical hypersensitivity was observed. These data indicate that oxytocin is implicated in the underlying neuronal processes of pain-induced anxiety and helps to elucidate the pathophysiological mechanisms of neuropathic pain. rnTo assess the influence of trait anxiety on pain sensation in rats, we determined mechanical hypersensitivity after sciatic nerve lesion (CCI) in animals selectively bred for high anxiety or low anxiety behaviour. The paw withdrawal thresholds were significantly decreased in high anxiety animals in comparison to low anxiety animals 2 and 3 weeks after surgery. In a second model state anxiety was induced by the sub-chronic injection of the anxiogenic drug pentylentetrazol in naive rats. Pain response to mechanical stimuli was increased after pharmacologically-induced anxiety. These results provided evidence for the influence of both trait and state anxiety on pain sensation. rnThe studies contribute to the elucidation of the relationship between pain and anxiety. We investigated that the neuropathic pain model displays sensory as well as emotional factors of peripheral neuropathy. Changes in expression levels of neuropeptides in the central nervous system due to neuropathic pain may contribute to the pathophysiology of neuropathic pain and its related symptoms in animals which might also be relevant for human scenarios. The results of the current study also confirm that anxiety plays an important role in the perception of pain. rnA better understanding of pain behaviour in animals might improve the preclinical profiling of analgesic drugs during development. The study highlights the potential use of the rat model as a new preclinical tool to further investigate the link between pain and anxiety by determining not only the sensory reflexes after painful stimuli but also the more complex pain-related behaviour such as anxiety.rn