Periodic Reporting for period 1 - PAIN-CARE (Chronic PAIN eradiCAtion by taRgeting Schwann cElls)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2023-11-01 do 2025-04-30
The SCOPE project, from which the PAIN-CARE initiative is derived, was based on our discovery of the unexpected role of Schwann cells in mechanical allodynia associated with neuropathic pain. Schwann cells engaged by macrophages, via the transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 (TRPA1) channel, amplify the proalgesic oxidative stress burden to signal mechanical allodynia. During the SCOPE project, we found that Schwann cells express receptors that may function similarly to macrophages. Specifically, CGRP binds to its receptor on Schwann cells and is internalized into endosomes, where cyclic AMP facilitates TRPA1-mediated amplification of oxidative stress, leading to pain signaling. The PAIN-CARE project aims to develop Schwann Cell–selective Analgesic Drugs (SCADs) for improved and safer pain treatment, surpassing the efficacy and safety of NSAIDs and opioids.
Based on these considerations, two points led us to reorient the PAIN-CARE project. First, constructing a suitable BMC based on olcegepant proved more complex than anticipated. Second, data obtained under the SCOPE project on inflammatory pain provided unexpected and innovative results that are amenable to drug development. NSAIDs are considerably less safe than anti-CGRP drugs, as they carry risks of gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, and kidney toxicity—particularly in the increasing target population of the elderly. We reasoned that developing better and safer analgesic for inflammatory pain is a much more important task that optimizing anti-migraine treatments. Therefore, we combined the efforts of the PAIN-CARE and SCOPE projects to study inflammatory mechanical allodynia induced by two classical proinflammatory agents: carrageenan and complete Freund’s adjuvant (CFA). This response is known to be mediated by prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and is inhibited by approximately 70% with NSAIDs.
Thus, we challenged two prevailing dogmas: first, that inflammatory mechanical pain is mediated by EP4 receptors in DRG neurons; and second, that the analgesic effect of NSAIDs is dependent on their anti-inflammatory action. We conclude that EP2 inhibition in Schwann cells represents a novel, safe, and effective strategy to alleviate inflammatory pain without impairing the protective and healing functions of inflammation. Furthermore, we observed that while CGRP-mediated cyclic AMP increase—responsible for migraine pain—results from the internalization of the agonist/receptor complex into the endosomal compartment, the cyclic AMP signaling pathway initiated by EP2 is entirely dependent on a nanodomain associated with the plasma membrane of Schwann cells. Additionally, Schwann cell EP4 which internalizes in endosomes does not mediate pain.
These crucial, innovative findings—decoupling pain from inflammation and distinguishing the intracellular pathways of migraine pain (caused by neurogenic inflammation and mediated by CGRP) from inflammatory pain (generated by tissue inflammation and mediated by PGE2) highlight new opportunities for the treatments of inflammatory pain by targeting Schwann cell pathways. Consequently, the PAIN-CARE project provided crucial findings for the development of SCADs (Schwann Cell-Associated Drugs) that selectively inhibit/silence the EP2 receptor in Schwann cells by diverse strategies, including BMC or viral vectors.