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Latremoliere, Alban

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Latremoliere

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Alban

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Latremoliere, Alban

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Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
  • Publication

    Arachidonic acid containing phosphatidylcholine increases due to microglial activation in ipsilateral spinal dorsal horn following spared sciatic nerve injury

    (Public Library of Science, 2017) Banno, Tomohiro; Omura, Takao; Masaki, Noritaka; Arima, Hideyuki; Xu, Dongmin; Okamoto, Ayako; Costigan, Michael; Latremoliere, Alban; Matsuyama, Yukihiro; Setou, Mitsutoshi

    Peripheral nerve injury induces substantial molecular changes in the somatosensory system that leads to maladaptive plasticity and cause neuropathic pain. Understanding the molecular pathways responsible for the development of neuropathic pain is essential to the development of novel rationally designed therapeutics. Although lipids make up to half of the dry weight of the spinal cord, their relation with the development of neuropathic pain is poorly understood. We aimed to elucidate the regulation of spinal lipids in response to neuropathic peripheral nerve injury in mice by utilizing matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization imaging mass spectrometry, which allows visualization of lipid distribution within the cord. We found that arachidonic acid (AA) containing [PC(diacyl-16:0/20:4)+K]+ was increased temporarily at superficial ipsilateral dorsal horn seven days after spared nerve injury (SNI). The spatiotemporal changes in lipid concentration resembled microglia activation as defined by ionized calcium binding adaptor molecule 1 (Iba1) immunohistochemistry. Suppression of microglial function through minocycline administration resulted in attenuation of hypersensitivity and reduces [PC(diacyl-16:0/20:4)+K]+ elevation in the spinal dorsal horn. These data suggested that AA containing [PC(diacyl-16:0/20:4)+K]+ is related to hypersensitivity evoked by SNI and implicate microglial cell activation in this lipid production.

  • Publication

    Diminished Schwann Cell Repair Responses Underlie Age-Associated Impaired Axonal Regeneration

    (Elsevier BV, 2014) Painter, Michio; Brosius Lutz, Amanda; Cheng, Yung-Chih; Latremoliere, Alban; Duong, Kelly; Miller, Christine; Posada, Sean; Cobos, Enrique J.; Zhang, Alan; Wagers, Amy; Havton, Leif A.; Barres, Ben; Omura, Takao; Woolf, Clifford

    The regenerative capacity of the peripheral nervous system declines with age. Why this occurs, however, is unknown. We demonstrate that 24-month-old mice exhibit an impairment of functional recovery after nerve injury compared to 2-month-old animals. We find no difference in the intrinsic growth capacity between aged and young sensory neurons in vitro or in their ability to activate growth-associated transcriptional programs after injury. Instead, using age-mismatched nerve transplants in vivo, we show that the extent of functional recovery depends on the age of the nerve graft, and not the age of the host. Molecular interrogation of the sciatic nerve reveals that aged Schwann cells (SCs) fail to rapidly activate a transcriptional repair program after injury. Functionally, aged SCs exhibit impaired dedifferentiation, myelin clearance, and macrophage recruitment. These results suggest that the age-associated decline in axonal regeneration results from diminished Schwann cell plasticity, leading to slower myelin clearance.

  • Publication

    Ensuring transparency and minimization of methodologic bias in preclinical pain research: PPRECISE considerations

    (Wolters Kluwer, 2016) Andrews, Nick A.; Latremoliere, Alban; Basbaum, Allan I.; Mogil, Jeffrey S.; Porreca, Frank; Rice, Andrew S.C.; Woolf, Clifford; Currie, Gillian L.; Dworkin, Robert H.; Eisenach, James C.; Evans, Scott; Gewandter, Jennifer S.; Gover, Tony D.; Handwerker, Hermann; Huang, Wenlong; Iyengar, Smriti; Jensen, Mark P.; Kennedy, Jeffrey D.; Lee, Nancy; Levine, Jon; Lidster, Katie; Machin, Ian; McDermott, Michael P.; McMahon, Stephen B.; Price, Theodore J.; Ross, Sarah E.; Scherrer, Grégory; Seal, Rebecca P.; Sena, Emily S.; Silva, Elizabeth; Stone, Laura; Svensson, Camilla I.; Turk, Dennis C.; Whiteside, Garth

    Abstract There is growing concern about lack of scientific rigor and transparent reporting across many preclinical fields of biological research. Poor experimental design and lack of transparent reporting can result in conscious or unconscious experimental bias, producing results that are not replicable. The Analgesic, Anesthetic, and Addiction Clinical Trial Translations, Innovations, Opportunities, and Networks (ACTTION) public–private partnership with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration sponsored a consensus meeting of the Preclinical Pain Research Consortium for Investigating Safety and Efficacy (PPRECISE) Working Group. International participants from universities, funding agencies, government agencies, industry, and a patient advocacy organization attended. Reduction of publication bias, increasing the ability of others to faithfully repeat experimental methods, and increased transparency of data reporting were specifically discussed. Parameters deemed essential to increase confidence in the published literature were clear, specific reporting of an a priori hypothesis and definition of primary outcome measure. Power calculations and whether measurement of minimal meaningful effect size to determine these should be a core component of the preclinical research effort provoked considerable discussion, with many but not all agreeing. Greater transparency of reporting should be driven by scientists, journal editors, reviewers, and grant funders. The conduct of high-quality science that is fully reported should not preclude novelty and innovation in preclinical pain research, and indeed, any efforts that curtail such innovation would be misguided. We believe that to achieve the goal of finding effective new treatments for patients with pain, the pain field needs to deal with these challenging issues.

  • Publication

    Mechanistic Differences in Neuropathic Pain Modalities Revealed by Correlating Behavior with Global Expression Profiling

    (2018) Cobos, Enrique J.; Nickerson, Chelsea A.; Gao, Fuying; Chandran, Vijayendran; Bravo-Caparrós, Inmaculada; González-Cano, Rafael; Riva, Priscilla; Andrews, Nick A.; Latremoliere, Alban; Seehus, Corey; Perazzoli, Gloria; Nieto, Francisco R.; Joller, Nicole; Painter, Michio W.; Ma, Chi Him Eddie; Omura, Takao; Chesler, Elissa J.; Geschwind, Daniel H.; Coppola, Giovanni; Rangachari, Manu; Woolf, Clifford; Costigan, Michael

    SUMMARY Chronic neuropathic pain is a major morbidity of neural injury, yet its mechanisms are incompletely understood. Hypersensitivity to previously non-noxious stimuli (allodynia) is a common symptom. Here, we demonstrate that the onset of cold hypersensitivity precedes tactile allodynia in a model of partial nerve injury, and this temporal divergence was associated with major differences in global gene expression in innervating dorsal root ganglia. Transcripts whose expression change correlates with the onset of cold allodynia were nociceptor related, whereas those correlating with tactile hypersensitivity were immune cell centric. Ablation of TrpV1 lineage nociceptors resulted in mice that did not acquire cold allodynia but developed normal tactile hypersensitivity, whereas depletion of macrophages or T cells reduced neuropathic tactile allodynia but not cold hypersensitivity. We conclude that neuropathic pain incorporates reactive processes of sensory neurons and immune cells, each leading to distinct forms of hypersensitivity, potentially allowing drug development targeted to each pain type.

  • Publication

    The serine protease inhibitor SerpinA3N attenuates neuropathic pain by inhibiting T cell-derived leukocyte elastase

    (2015) Vicuña, Lucas; Strochlic, David E.; Latremoliere, Alban; Bali, Kiran Kumar; Simonetti, Manuela; Husainie, Dewi; Prokosch, Sandra; Riva, Priscilla; Griffin, Robert S.; Njoo, Christian; Gehrig, Stefanie; Mall, Marcus A.; Arnold, Bernd; Devor, Marshall; Woolf, Clifford; Liberles, Stephen; Costigan, Michael; Kuner, Rohini