Estrogen synthesis in the spinal dorsal horn: a new central mechanism for the hormonal regulation of pain
Open Access
- 1 August 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology
- Vol. 291 (2) , R291-R299
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00930.2005
Abstract
The data summarized here suggest the existence of a new central pathway for the hormonal regulation of pain. These data mainly collected in quail, a useful model in neuroendocrinology, demonstrate that numerous neurons in the superficial laminae of the spinal cord express aromatase (estrogen-synthase). Chronic and systemic blockade of this enzyme in quail alters nociception within days, indicating that the slow genomic effects of sex steroids on nociception classically observed in mammals also occur in birds and require aromatization of androgens into estrogens. However, by contrast with these slow effects, acute intrathecal inhibition of aromatase in restricted spinal cord segments reveals that estrogens can also control nociception much faster, within 1 min, presumably through the activation of a nongenomic pathway and in a manner that depends on an immediate response to fast activation/deactivation of local aromatase activity. This emergent central and rapid paracrine mechanism might permit instantaneous and segment-specific changes in pain sensitivity; it draws new interesting perspectives for the study of the estrogenic control of pain, thus far limited to the classical view of slow genomic changes in pain, depending on peripheral estrogens. The expression of aromatase in the spinal cord in other species and in other central nociception-related areas is also briefly discussed.Keywords
This publication has 100 references indexed in Scilit:
- Estradiol and progesterone differentially regulate formalin-induced nociception in ovariectomized female ratsHormones and Behavior, 2006
- Diversity of ovarian steroid signaling in the hypothalamusFrontiers in Neuroendocrinology, 2005
- Rapid actions of estradiol on cyclic amp response-element binding protein phosphorylation in dorsal root ganglion neuronsNeuroscience, 2004
- Estrogen affects BDNF expression following chronic constriction nerve injuryNeuroReport, 2003
- Estrogen receptor-α and -β immunoreactivity and mRNA in neurons of sensory and autonomic ganglia and spinal cordCell and tissue research, 2001
- Sex hormones and pain: A new role for brain aromatase?Journal of Comparative Neurology, 2000
- Distribution and effects of testosterone on aromatase mRNA in the quail forebrain: A non-radioactive in situ hybridization studyJournal of Chemical Neuroanatomy, 1998
- Differential Ligand Activation of Estrogen Receptors ERα and ERβ at AP1 SitesScience, 1997
- Estrogen receptor-immunoreactive neurons are present in the female rat lumbosacral spinal cordJournal of Neuroscience Research, 1996
- Colocalization of Oestrogen Receptor lmmunoreactivity and Preproenkephalin mRNA Expression to Neurons in the Superficial Laminae of the Spinal and Medullary Dorsal Horn of RatsEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 1996