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Substance P-Botulinum Mediates Long-term Silencing of Pain Pathways that can be Re-instated with a Second Injection of the Construct in Mice

Maria Maiarù, Charlotte Leese, Silvia Silva-Hucha, Sofia Fontana-Giusti, Luke Tait, Francesco Tamagnini, Bazbek Davletov, Stephen P. Hunt

2024Journal of Pain11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chronic pain presents an enormous personal and economic burden and there is an urgent need for effective treatments. In a mouse model of chronic neuropathic pain, selective silencing of key neurons in spinal pain signalling networks with botulinum constructs resulted in a reduction of pain behaviours associated with the peripheral nerve. However, to establish clinical relevance it was important to know how long this silencing period lasted. Now, we show that neuronal silencing and the concomitant reduction of neuropathic mechanical and thermal hypersensitivity lasts for up to 120d following a single injection of botulinum construct. Crucially, we show that silencing and analgesia can then be reinstated with a second injection of the botulinum conjugate. Here we demonstrate that single doses of botulinum-toxin conjugates are a powerful new way of providing long-term neuronal silencing and pain relief. PERSPECTIVE: This research demonstrates that botulinum-toxin conjugates are a powerful new way of providing long-term neuronal silencing without toxicity following a single injection of the conjugate and have the potential for repeated dosing when silencing reverses.

Topics & Concepts

Construct (python library)Term (time)PsychologyMedicineNeuroscienceComputer sciencePhysicsProgramming languageQuantum mechanicsBotulinum Toxin and Related Neurological DisordersPain Mechanisms and TreatmentsHereditary Neurological Disorders
Substance P-Botulinum Mediates Long-term Silencing of Pain Pathways that can be Re-instated with a Second Injection of the Construct in Mice | Litcius