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Experiencing Neonatal Maternal Separation Increased Pain Sensitivity in Adult Male Mice: Involvement of Oxytocinergic System Publisher Pubmed



Aminikhoei H1, 2 ; Amiri S3 ; Mohammadiasl A4 ; Alijanpour S5 ; Poursaman S4 ; Hajmirzaian A4, 6 ; Rastegar M3 ; Mesdaghinia A7 ; Banafshe HR7, 8 ; Sadeghi E9 ; Samiei E4 ; Mehr SE4, 6 ; Dehpour AR4, 6
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Medical Plants Research Center, Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences, Shahrekord, Iran
  2. 2. Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Shahrekord University of Medical Sciences, Shahrekord, Iran
  3. 3. Regenerative Medicine Program, Department of Biochemistry and Medical Genetics, Max Rady College of Medicine, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
  4. 4. Experimental Medicine Research Center, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  5. 5. Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences, Gonbad Kavous University, Gonbad, Iran
  6. 6. Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, P.O. Box: 13145-784, Tehran, Iran
  7. 7. Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran
  8. 8. Physiology Research Center, Kashan University of Medical Sciences, Kashan, Iran
  9. 9. Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, P.O. Box: 13145-784, Tehran, Iran

Source: Neuropeptides Published:2017


Abstract

Early-life stress adversely affects the development of the brain, and alters a variety of behaviors such as pain in later life. In present study, we investigated how early-life stress (maternal separation or MS) can affect the nociceptive response later in life. We particularly focused on the role of oxytocin (OT) in regulating nociception in previously exposed (MS during early postnatal development) mice that were subjected to acute stress (restraint stress or RS). Further, we evaluated whether such modulation of pain sensation in MS mice are regulated by shared mechanisms of the OTergic and opioidergic systems. To do this, we assessed the underlying systems mediating the nociceptive response by administrating different antagonists (for both opioid and OTergic systems) under the different experimental conditions (control vs MS, and control plus RS vs MS plus RS). Our results showed that MS increased pain sensitivity in both tail-flick and hot-plate tests while after administration of OT (1 μg/μl/mouse, i.c.v) pain threshold was increased. Atosiban, an OT antagonist (10 μg/μl/mouse, i.c.v) abolished the effects of OT. While acute RS increased the pain threshold in control (and not MS) mice, treating MS mice with OT normalized the pain response to RS. This latter effect was reversed by atosiban and/or naltrexone, an opioid antagonist (0.5 μg/μl/mouse, i.c.v) suggesting that OT enhances the effect of endogenous opioids. OTergic system is involved in mediating the nociception under acute stress in mice subjected to early-life stress and OTergic and opioidergic systems interact to modulate pain sensitivity in MS mice. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd
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