Background: There is a dearth of drugs to manage a dose-limiting painful peripheral neuropathy induced by paclitaxel in some patients during the treatment of cancer. Gamma-aminobutyric acid transporter-1 (GAT-1) whose expression is increased in the brain and spinal cord during paclitaxel-induced neuropathic pain (PINP) might be a potential therapeutic target for managing PINP. Thus, our aim was to evaluate if systemic administration of a GAT-1 inhibitor ameliorates PINP.
Methods: The reaction latency to thermal stimuli (hot plate test; at 55 °C) and cold stimuli (cold plate test; at 4 °C) of female BALB/c mice was recorded before and after intraperitoneal treatment with paclitaxel, its vehicle, and/or a selective GAT-1 inhibitor NO-711. The effects of NO-711 on motor coordination were evaluated using the rotarod test at a constant speed of 4 rpm or accelerating mode from 4 rpm to 40 rpm over 5 min.
Results: The coadministration of paclitaxel with NO-711 3 mg/kg prevented the development of paclitaxel-induced thermal hyperalgesia and cold allodynia at day 7 after drug treatment. NO-711 at 3 mg/kg produced antihyperalgesic activity up to 1 h and antiallodynic activity up to 2 h in mice with established paclitaxel-induced thermal hyperalgesia and cold allodynia. No motor deficits were observed with NO-711 at a dose of 3 mg/kg, whereas a higher dose 5 mg/kg caused motor impairment and reduced mean time spent on the rotarod at a constant speed of 4 rpm. However, at a rotarod accelerating mode from 4 rpm to 40 rpm over 5 min, NO-711 3 mg/kg caused motor impairment up to 1 h, but had recovered by 2 h.
Conclusions: These results show that systemic administration of the GAT-1 inhibitor NO-711 has preventative and therapeutic activity against paclitaxel-induced thermal hyperalgesia and cold allodynia. NO-711's antiallodynic effects, but not antihyperalgesic effects, were independent of its motor impairment/sedation properties. Thus, low doses of GAT-1 inhibitors could be useful for the prevention and treatment of PINP with proper dose titration to reduce motor impairment/sedation side effects.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.2798 | DOI Listing |
Epilepsia
November 2024
The Department of Neuroscience, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Brain Commun
April 2024
Department of Neurology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN 37232, USA.
We have previously characterized the molecular mechanisms for variants in γ-aminobutyric acid transporter 1-encoding solute carrier family 6-member 1 () and concluded that a partial or complete loss of γ-aminobutyric acid uptake due to impaired protein trafficking is the primary aetiology. Impairment of γ-aminobutyric acid transporter 1 function could cause compensatory changes in the expression of γ-aminobutyric acid receptors, which, in turn, modify disease pathophysiology and phenotype. Here we used different approaches including radioactive H γ-aminobutyric acid uptake in cells and synaptosomes, immunohistochemistry and confocal microscopy as well as brain slice surface protein biotinylation to characterize and mice, representative of a partial or a complete loss of function of mutations, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlia
November 2023
Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, Section of Neuroscience and Cell Biology, Università Politecnica delle Marche, Ancona, Italy.
Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), the principal inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain, affects numerous immune cell functions. Microglia, the brain's resident innate immune cells, regulate GABA signaling through GABA receptors and express the complete GABAergic machinery for GABA synthesis, uptake, and release. Here, the use of primary microglial cell cultures and ex vivo brain tissue sections allowed for demonstrating that treatment with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) increased microglial GABA uptake as well as GABA transporter (GAT)-1 trafficking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomolecules
November 2022
Department of Physicochemical Drug Analysis, Faculty of Pharmacy, Jagiellonian University Medical College, Medyczna 9, 30-688 Cracow, Poland.
The recently obtained cryo-electron microscopy structure (PDB code: 7SK2) of the human γ-aminobutyric acid transporter type 1 (hGAT-1) in complex with the antiepileptic drug, tiagabine, revealed a rather unexpected binding mode for this inhibitor in an inward-open state of the transporter. The simultaneously released crystal structures of the modified dopamine transporter with mutations mimicking hGAT-1 indicated an alternative binding mode for the tiagabine analogues that were found to block the transporter in an outward-open state, which is more consistent with the results of previous biological and molecular modeling studies. In view of the above discrepancies, our study compares different hypothetical tiagabine binding modes using classical and accelerated molecular dynamics simulations, as well as MM-GBSA free binding energy (dG) calculations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropharmacology
December 2020
Department of Physiology and Pathophysiology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Xi'an Jiaotong University Health Science Center, Xi'an, 710061, China. Electronic address:
The hyperactivity of the lateral habenula (LHb) is closely associated with depression. At present, it is unknown how GABA transporter (GAT) in the LHb affects depressive-like behaviors, particularly in Parkinson's disease (PD)-related depression. In this study, unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine lesions of the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) in rats induced depressive-like behaviors and led to hyperactivity of LHb neurons compared to sham-lesioned rats.
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