PAIN
Volume 114, Issue 1 , Pages 257-265, March 2005

Lack of estrogen increases pain in the trigeminal formalin model: a behavioural and immunocytochemical study of transgenic ArKO mice

  • Sylvie Multon

      Affiliations

    • Research Center for Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology, Neuroanatomy Laboratory, University of Liege, Rue de Pitteurs, 20 (L3), 4020 Liege, Belgium
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +32 43665969; fax: +32 43665173.
  • ,
  • Arpad Pardutz

      Affiliations

    • Department of Neurology, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary
  • ,
  • Jeanine Mosen

      Affiliations

    • Research Center for Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology, Neuroanatomy Laboratory, University of Liege, Rue de Pitteurs, 20 (L3), 4020 Liege, Belgium
  • ,
  • Minh Tri Hua

      Affiliations

    • Research Center for Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology, Neuroanatomy Laboratory, University of Liege, Rue de Pitteurs, 20 (L3), 4020 Liege, Belgium
  • ,
  • Christian Defays

      Affiliations

    • Research Center for Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology, Neuroanatomy Laboratory, University of Liege, Rue de Pitteurs, 20 (L3), 4020 Liege, Belgium
    • Department of Neurology, Headache Research Unit, University of Liège, Liege, Belgium
  • ,
  • Shin-Ichiro Honda

      Affiliations

    • Department of Biochemistry, School of Medecine, Fujita Health University, Aichi, Japan
  • ,
  • Nobuhiro Harada

      Affiliations

    • Department of Biochemistry, School of Medecine, Fujita Health University, Aichi, Japan
  • ,
  • Catalina Bohotin

      Affiliations

    • Research Center for Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology, Neuroanatomy Laboratory, University of Liege, Rue de Pitteurs, 20 (L3), 4020 Liege, Belgium
  • ,
  • Rachelle Franzen

      Affiliations

    • Research Center for Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology, Neuroanatomy Laboratory, University of Liege, Rue de Pitteurs, 20 (L3), 4020 Liege, Belgium
  • ,
  • Jean Schoenen

      Affiliations

    • Research Center for Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology, Neuroanatomy Laboratory, University of Liege, Rue de Pitteurs, 20 (L3), 4020 Liege, Belgium
    • Department of Neurology, Headache Research Unit, University of Liège, Liege, Belgium

Received 21 January 2004; received in revised form 25 October 2004; accepted 20 December 2004.

Abstract 

In order to examine the effect of estrogen on facial pain, we first compared the face-rubbing evoked by a formalin injection in the lip of aromatase-knockout (ArKO) mice, lacking endogenous estrogen production, 17β-estradiol-treated ArKO mice (ArKO-E2) and wild-type (WT) littermates. During the ‘acute’ phase of pain the time spent rubbing was similar in the three groups, whereas during the following ‘interphase’ and the second phase of pain, grooming was increased in ArKO mice. Estradiol-treatment restored a behaviour similar to WT group. To better understand estrogens modulation on pain processes, we examined changes in 5-HT and CGRP innervations of trigeminal nucleus caudalis (TNC) in ArKO, ArKO-E2 and WT groups sacrified during the interphase. Whereas serotonin and CGRP immunoreactivities were comparable in WT and ArKO non-injected control groups, our data showed that 9min after formalin injection, the density of serotoninergic terminals increased significantly in WT, but not in ArKO mice, while that of CGRP-immunoreactive fibers was lower in WT than in ArKO mice on the injected side. Estradiol-treatment only partially reversed these changes in ArKO-E2 mice. We conclude that estrogen deprivation in ArKO mice can be responsible for increased nociceptive response and that it is accompanied by transmitter changes favouring pro- over anti-nociceptive mechanisms in TNC during interphase of the formalin model. That estradiol-treatment completely reverses the behavioural abnormality suggests that estrogens absence produces chiefly functional activation-dependent changes. However, the fact that the immunohistochemical abnormalities were not totally normalized by estradiol-treatment suggested that some permanent developmental alterations may occur in ArKO mice.

Keywords: Serotonin, CGRP, Trigeminal nucleus caudalis, Estrogen, Aromatase

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PII: S0304-3959(04)00617-7

doi:10.1016/j.pain.2004.12.030

PAIN
Volume 114, Issue 1 , Pages 257-265, March 2005