Gender-different effect of Src family kinases antagonism on photophobia and trigeminal ganglion activity.

IF 7.3 1区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Headache and Pain Pub Date : 2024-10-11 DOI:10.1186/s10194-024-01875-3
Zhuoan Huang, Junyu Yao, Lingdi Nie, Xinchen Nie, Xuechunhui Xiong, Sulev Kõks, John P Quinn, Aditi Kanhere, Minyan Wang
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Abstract

Background: Src family kinases (SFKs) contribute to migraine pathogenesis, yet its role in regulating photophobia behaviour, one of the most common forms of migraine, remains unknown. Here, we addressed whether SFKs antagonism alleviates photophobia behavior and explored the underlying mechanism involving hypothalamus and trigeminal ganglion activity, as measured by the alteration of neuropeptide levels and transcriptome respectively.

Methods: A rapid-onset and injury-free mouse model of photophobia was developed following intranasal injection of the TRPA1 activator, umbellulone. The role of SFKs antagonism on light aversion was assessed by the total time the mouse stays in the light and transition times between the dark and light compartments. To gain insight to the preventive mechanism of SFKs antagonism, hypothalamic neuropeptides levels were assessed using enzyme linked immunofluorescent assay and trigeminal ganglion activity were assessed using RNA-sequencing and qPCR analysis.

Results: SFKs antagonism by a clinically relevant SFKs inhibitor saracatinib reduced the total time in light and transition times in male mice, but not in females, suggesting SFKs play a crucial role in photophobia progressing and exhibit a male-only effect. SFKs antagonism had no effect on hypothalamic calcitonin gene-related peptide and pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide levels of all mice investigated, suggesting the gender-different effect of saracatinib on light aversion appears to be independent of these hypothalamic neuropeptide levels. In trigeminal ganglion of male mice, photophobia is associated with profound alteration of differentially expressed genes, part of which were reversed by SFKs antagonism. Subsequent qPCR analysis showed SFKs antagonism displayed gender-different modulation of expression in some candidate genes, particularly noteworthy those encoding ion channels (trpm3, Scn8a), ATPase signaling (crebbp, Atp5α1) and kinase receptors (Zmynd8, Akt1).

Conclusions: In conclusion, our data revealed that SFKs antagonism reduced photophobia processing in male mice and exhibited gender-different modulation of trigeminal ganglion activity, primarily manifesting as alterations in the transcriptome profile. These findings underscore the potential of SFKs antagonism for allieving photophobia in males, highlighting its value in the emerging field of precision medicine.

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Src家族激酶拮抗剂对畏光和三叉神经节活动的性别差异影响
背景:Src家族激酶(SFKs)是偏头痛的发病机制之一,但它在调节偏头痛最常见形式之一的畏光行为中的作用仍然未知。在此,我们探讨了 SFKs 拮抗是否能缓解畏光行为,并分别通过神经肽水平和转录组的改变,探索了涉及下丘脑和三叉神经节活动的潜在机制:方法:通过鼻内注射 TRPA1 激活剂伞形酮,建立了一种快速发作且无损伤的畏光小鼠模型。通过小鼠在光下停留的总时间以及在暗区和光区之间的转换时间来评估 SFKs 拮抗对光厌恶的作用。为了深入了解SFKs拮抗作用的预防机制,使用酶联免疫荧光法评估了下丘脑神经肽的水平,并使用RNA测序和qPCR分析评估了三叉神经节的活性:结果:通过临床相关的SFKs抑制剂沙拉替尼拮抗SFKs,雄性小鼠在光下的总时间和过渡时间缩短,而雌性小鼠则没有缩短,这表明SFKs在畏光进展中起着关键作用,并且只对雄性有影响。SFKs拮抗剂对所有受试小鼠的下丘脑降钙素基因相关肽和垂体腺苷酸环化酶激活多肽水平没有影响,表明沙拉帕尼对光反射的性别差异效应似乎与这些下丘脑神经肽水平无关。在雄性小鼠的三叉神经节中,畏光与差异表达基因的深刻改变有关,其中部分基因被SFKs拮抗剂逆转。随后的 qPCR 分析表明,SFKs 拮抗对一些候选基因的表达有性别差异的调节作用,尤其值得注意的是编码离子通道(trpm3、Scn8a)、ATPase 信号转导(crebbp、Atp5α1)和激酶受体(Zmynd8、Akt1)的基因:总之,我们的数据显示,SFKs拮抗剂可减少雄性小鼠的畏光处理,并对三叉神经节的活动表现出不同性别的调节作用,主要表现为转录组特征的改变。这些发现强调了SFKs拮抗剂在缓解雄性畏光症方面的潜力,凸显了其在新兴精准医学领域的价值。
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来源期刊
Journal of Headache and Pain
Journal of Headache and Pain 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
11.80
自引率
13.50%
发文量
143
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Headache and Pain, a peer-reviewed open-access journal published under the BMC brand, a part of Springer Nature, is dedicated to researchers engaged in all facets of headache and related pain syndromes. It encompasses epidemiology, public health, basic science, translational medicine, clinical trials, and real-world data. With a multidisciplinary approach, The Journal of Headache and Pain addresses headache medicine and related pain syndromes across all medical disciplines. It particularly encourages submissions in clinical, translational, and basic science fields, focusing on pain management, genetics, neurology, and internal medicine. The journal publishes research articles, reviews, letters to the Editor, as well as consensus articles and guidelines, aimed at promoting best practices in managing patients with headaches and related pain.
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