http://www.mcgill.ca/research/channels/news/214078
From the article:
Study suggests erasing neuronal memories may help control
persistent pain
For some, the pain is so great that they can’t even bear to have
clothes touch their skin. For others, it means that every step is a
deliberate and agonizing choice. Whether the pain is caused by
arthritic joints, an injury to a nerve or a disease like
fibromyalgia, research now suggests there are new solutions for
those who suffer from chronic pain.
A team of researchers led by McGill neuroscientist Terence
Coderre, who is also affiliated with the Research Institute of the
McGill University Health Centre, has found the key to understanding
how memories of pain are stored in the brain. More importantly, the
researchers are also able to suggest how these memories can be
erased, making it possible to ease chronic pain.
It has long been known that the central nervous system
“remembers” painful experiences, that they leave a memory trace of
pain. And when there is new sensory input, the pain memory trace in
the brain magnifies the feeling so that even a gentle touch can be
excruciating.
“Perhaps the best example of a pain memory trace is found with
phantom limb pain,” suggests Coderre. “Patients may have a limb
amputated because of gangrene, and because the limb was painful
before it was amputated, even though the limb is gone, the patients
continue to feel they are suffering from pain in the absent limb.
That’s because the brain remembers the pain. In fact, there’s
evidence that any pain that lasts more than a few minutes will
leave a trace in the nervous system.” It’s this memory of pain,
which exists at the neuronal level, that is critical to the
development of chronic pain. But until now, it was not known how
these pain memories were stored at the level of the neurons.
Recent work has shown that the protein kinase PKMzeta plays a
crucial role in building and maintaining memory by strengthening
the connections between neurons. Now Coderre and his colleagues
have discovered that PKMzeta is also the key to understanding how
the memory of pain is stored in the neurons. They were able to show
that after painful stimulation, the level of PKMzeta increases
persistently in the central nervous system (CNS).
Even more importantly, the researchers found that by blocking
the activity of PKMzeta at the neuronal level, they could reverse
the hypersensitivity to pain that neurons developed after
irritating the skin by applying capsaicin – the active ingredient
in hot peppers. Moreover, erasing this pain memory trace was found
to reduce both persistent pain and heightened sensitivity to
touch.
Coderre and his colleagues believe that building on this study
to devise ways to target PKMzeta in pain pathways could have a
significant effect for patients with chronic pain. “Many pain
medications target pain at the peripheral level, by reducing
inflammation, or by activating analgesia systems in the brain to
reduce the feeling of pain,” says Coderre. “This is the first time
that we can foresee medications that will target an established
pain memory trace as a way of reducing pain hypersensitivity. We
believe it’s an avenue that may offer new hope to those suffering
from chronic pain.”
The full article can be found at: http://www.molecularpain.com/content/7/1/99
Other contributing researchers on this study include Andre
Laferrière, Mark H Pitcher, Anne Haldane, Yue
Huang, Virginia Cornea, Naresh Kumar, Fernando
Cervero (all from the Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain at
McGill) and co-author Todd C Sacktor (State University of New York
Downstate Medical Center).
This research was supported by grants from Canadian Institutes
of Health Research (CIHR), the Louise and Alan Edwards Foundation,
National Institutes of Health (NIH) and an Astra-Zeneca/AECRP
fellowship.