| Literature DB >> 28154610 |
David C Fritzinger1, Daniel E Benjamin1.
Abstract
Certain types of pain are major unmet medical needs that affect more than 8 percent of the population. Neuropathic pain can be caused by many pathogenic processes including injury, autoimmune disease, neurological disease, endocrine dysfunction, infection, toxin exposure, and substance abuse and is frequently resistant to available pain therapies. The same can be said of postsurgical pain, which can arise from uncontrolled inflammation around the wound site. The complement system is part of the innate immune system and can both initiate and sustain acute and chronic inflammatory pain. Here we review the complement system and original investigations that identify potential drug targets within this system. Drugs that act to inhibit the complement system could fill major gaps in our current standard of care for neuropathic pain states.Entities:
Keywords: Complement; Complement inhibition; Neuropathic pain; Post-operative pain
Year: 2016 PMID: 28154610 PMCID: PMC5283843 DOI: 10.2174/1876386301609010026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Pain J
Fig. (1)Complement activation pathways, showing final activation products, such as C3b (or C3dg) on cell surfaces, the Membrane Attack Complex (MAC) and the anaphylatoxins produced during complement activation. The three activation pathways (blue) meet at the C3 activation step (green), where the activated C3 is bound covalently on the target cell surface. Complement activation can cause pain in three ways (red). First, the MAC can lyse cells. Second, cells with bound C3b (or C3dg) are targeted for phagocytosis. Finally, the anaphylatoxins C3a and C5a can bind to their receptors (C3aR and C5aR, respectively), attracting macrophages which cause inflammation.
Fig. (2)Effect of complement depletion by CVF on hyperalgesia in rats following sciatic nerve ligation. Sham treated rats (no nerve ligation) showed no increase in pain sensitivity. Sciatic nerve ligation followed by saline injections showed a significant increase in pain sensitivity through the course of the experiment. Pain sensitivity in rats treated with CVF before and after surgery was essentially identical to untreated rats, while injection of CVF into saline-treated rats on day 4 showed a decrease in hyperalgesia lasting at least 3 days. (Data from: Nie et al., 2007 and printed with the permission of the author.)
Summary of cited studies on the role of complement in experimental and disease-related pain.
| Pain Model | Organism | Experimental | Anti Complement | Result | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Opioid Pain Relief | Mice | Anti-analgesic effect | C3a | C3a reduces the analgesic effect on mice | [ |
| Sciatic Nerve Ligation | Rat | Mechanical Allodynia | C5aR antagonist AcF- | Less mechanical and cold allodynia in mice | [ |
| C6 (−/−) rats | Mechanical Allodynia | NA | Normal neuropathic pain phenotype, MAC not | ||
| Sciatic Nerve Ligation | Rat | Mechanical hyperalgesia | CVF | Complement depletion reduces pain behavior | [ |
| Sciatic Nerve Ligation | Rat | Thermal Hyperalgesia | Soluble Complement | C3 deposition seen after SCL and IgG | [ |
| Spinal inflammatory | Rat | Mechanical Allodynia | sCR1 | sCR1 injection reduces mechanical allodynia. | [ |
| Sciatic Nerve Crush | Rat | Macrophage infiltration | Conmplement inhibitor: | Less macrophage infiltration in CVF-treated | [ |
| Sciatic Nerve Chronic | Mouse | Hyperalgesia | CVF | Mice given daily injections of CVF had less | [ |
| Paw Incision | Mouse | Incisional Allodynia and | AcF-[OPdChaWR] | Daily injection of AcF-[OPdChaWR] reduces | [ |
| Paw injection | Mouse | Heat and Mechanical | NA | C5a injection elicits both heat and mechanical | [ |
| Paw injection | Mouse | Heat Hyperalgesia and | PMX53 (C5aR | Injection of PMX53 reduces both heat | [ |
| Paw Injection | Rat | Edema | Vinblastine | C5a -induced hypernociception reduced when | [ |
| Hypernociception caused | PMX53 | PMX53 injection reduced hypernociception. | |||
| Rheumatoid Arthritis | Human | C5a | NA | C5a levels increased in rheumatoid joint | [ |
| Sickle Cell Anemia | Human | Pain, C3a, C3, Bb, C4d, | NA | Measured complement levels in patients | [ |
| C5a Injection into | Rat | Nociception | Hydroxyurea | C5a is a chemotactic peptide, and injection | [ |
| anti-ganglioside GD2 | Rat | Hindpaw allodynia | Non complement-fixing | Mice treated with mutant antibody with | [ |
| C5a receptor knockout | Mouse | Pain, edema | C5aR knockout | In C5aR−/− mice, thermal nociceptive pain | [ |
| Hematuria/Groin Pain | Human | C3b | NA | Patients with loin pain and Haematuria had | [ |
| Spinal Cord Injury | Rat | Macrophages | Vaccinia Virus | VCP injection following spinal cord injury | [ |
| CFA and C5a injection | Mice | Threshold of pain | PMX53, knockout mice | Showed that pain is mediated by activation of | [ |
| Inflammatory and | Mice | Hyperalgesia | DF2593A | Showed injection of mice with DF2593A | [ |