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Current Pharmaceutical Design

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1381-6128
ISSN (Online): 1873-4286

Nocistatin: Milestone of One Decade of Research

Author(s): Emiko Okuda-Ashitaka and Seiji Ito

Volume 21, Issue 7, 2015

Page: [868 - 884] Pages: 17

DOI: 10.2174/1381612820666141027112451

Price: $65

Abstract

A neuropeptide nociceptin or orphanin FQ (N/OFQ) is an endogenous ligand for the orphan opioid receptor-like receptor. During studies on the analysis of the precursor of N/OFQ, we identified a novel neuropeptide produced from the same precursor and named it “nocistatin (NST)”. Intrathecal (i.t.) administration of N/OFQ induces pain responses including touch-evoked allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia, and simultaneous administration of NST blocks the allodynia and hyperalgesia induced by N/OFQ. In the years since these discoveries, N/OFQ has been shown to be involved in a wide range of pharmacological activities, such as relaying pain perception in peripheral tissues, to the central nervous system, and NST was shown to have opposite effects on various central functions evoked by N/OFQ. Pharmacological characterization using various neurotransmitter agents, agonists, antagonists and knockout mice in vivo; electrophysiological and immunohistological analysis ex vivo; and molecular cloning using affinity chromatography of high-performance affinity nanobeads; and protein processing measurement using bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) in vitro have generated new insights into pain transmission regulated by NST and N/OFQ. This review focuses on the molecular and cellular mechanisms of pain transmission regulated by NST.

Keywords: Pain, nocistatin, nociceptin/orphanin FQ, protein processing, synaptic transmission, central sensitization, neural network, receptor.


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