PACAP-38 and PACAP(6-38) Degranulate Rat Meningeal Mast Cells the Orphan MrgB-Receptor.

Front Cell Neurosci

Glostrup Research Institute, Danish Headache Center, Department of Neurology, Rigshospitalet Glostrup, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Published: March 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • PACAP-38 infusion triggers migraine attacks in those who suffer from migraines and causes headaches in individuals who do not, with side effects like flushing being treatable with antihistamines.
  • The study explores the degranulation of mast cells in response to PACAP ligands, suggesting the involvement of specific splice variants of the PAC-receptor or a novel receptor for PACAP-38.
  • Findings indicate PACAP-38 is more effective than PACAP-27 in inducing mast cell degranulation in the meninges, and while certain PAC-receptor splice variants were not found in peritoneal mast cells, the MrgB receptor was present and may play a significant role.

Article Abstract

Infusion of pituitary adenylate cyclase activating peptide-38 (PACAP-38) provokes migraine attacks in migraineurs and headache in non-migraineurs. Adverse events like long-lasting flushing and heat sensation can be terminated with oral antihistamine treatment, indicating the involvement of mast cell activation after PACAP-infusion. Degranulation of rat peritoneal mast cells was provoked by several isoforms of PACAP previously unknown receptor pharmacology. The effect might thus be mediated either specific splice variants of the PAC-receptor or an unknown receptor for PACAP-38. In the present study, we characterize degranulation of rat meningeal mast cells in response to PACAP-receptor ligands. Furthermore, we investigate if PACAP-38-induced mast cell degranulation is mediated PAC-receptor splice variants and/or the orphan Mas-related G-protein coupled member B3 (MrgB)-receptor. To address this, the pharmacological effect of different PACAP isoforms on meningeal mast cell degranulation was investigated in the hemisected skull model after toluidine blue staining followed by microscopic quantification. Presence of mRNA encoding PAC-receptor splice variants and the MrgB-receptor in rat mast cells was investigated by Reverse Transcriptase-Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) analysis. The effect of PACAP isoforms on PAC- and MrgB-receptor-expressing oocytes were performed by two-electrode voltage-clamp (TEVC) electrophysiology. PACAP-38 is a more potent mast cell degranulating agent than Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase Activating Peptide-27 (PACAP-27) in the meninges. Presence of mRNA encoding the PAC-receptor and its different splice variants could not be detected in peritoneal mast cells by RT-PCR, whereas the orphan MrgB-receptor, recently suggested to be a mediator of basic secretagogues-induced mast cell degranulation, was widely present. In PAC-receptor-expressing oocytes both PACAP-38, PACAP-27 and the specific PAC-receptor agonist maxadilan were equipotent, however, only PACAP-38 showed a significant degranulatory effect on mast cells. We confirmed Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase Activating Peptide(6-38) [PACAP(6-38)] to be a PAC-receptor antagonist, and we demonstrated that it is a potent mast cell degranulator and have an agonistic effect on MrgB-receptors expressed in oocytes. The present study provides evidence that PACAP-induced mast cell degranulation in rat is mediated through a putative new PACAP-receptor with the order of potency being: PACAP-38 = PACAP(6-38) > > PACAP-27 = maxadilan. The results suggest that the observed responses are mediated the orphan MrgB-receptor.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6447718PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2019.00114DOI Listing

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