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Molecular Pain 2009-Mar

Characterization of NF-kB-mediated inhibition of catechol-O-methyltransferase.

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Inna E Tchivileva
Andrea G Nackley
Li Qian
Sean Wentworth
Matthew Conrad
Luda B Diatchenko

Keywords

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT), an enzyme that metabolizes catecholamines, has recently been implicated in the modulation of pain. Specifically, low COMT activity is associated with heightened pain perception and development of musculoskeletal pain in humans as well as increased experimental pain sensitivity in rodents.

RESULTS

We report that the proinflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) downregulates COMT mRNA and protein in astrocytes. Examination of the distal COMT promoter (P2-COMT) reveals a putative binding site for nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB), the pivotal regulator of inflammation and the target of TNFalpha. Cell culture assays and functional deletion analyses of the cloned P2-COMT promoter demonstrate that TNFalpha inhibits P2-COMT activity in astrocytes by inducing NF-kappaB complex recruitment to the specific kappaB binding site.

CONCLUSIONS

Collectively, our findings provide the first evidence for NF-kappaB-mediated inhibition of COMT expression in the central nervous system, suggesting that COMT contributes to the pathogenesis of inflammatory pain states.

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