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An OFF switch for pain
02-26-2012, 12:22 AM
Post: #1
An OFF switch for pain
An OFF switch for pain

Chemists build light-controlled neural inhibitor

Munich, 22 February 2012

The notion of a pain switch is an alluring idea, but is it realistic? Well, chemists at LMU Munich, in collaboration with colleagues in Berkeley and Bordeaux, have now shown in laboratory experiments that it is possible to inhibit the activity of pain-sensitive neurons using an agent that acts as a photosensitive switch. For the LMU researchers, the method primarily represents a valuable tool for probing the neurobiology of pain. (Nature Methods, 19.02.2012)

The system developed by the LMU team, led by Dirk Trauner, who is Professor of Chemical Biology and Genetics, is a chemical compound they call QAQ. The molecule is made up of two functional parts, each containing a quaternary ammonium, which are connected by a nitrogen double bond (N=N). This bridge forms the switch, as its conformation can be altered by light. Irradiation with light of a specific wavelength causes the molecule to flip from a bent to an extended form; exposure to light of a different color reverses the effect.

One half of QAQ closely resembles one of the active analogs of lidocaine, a well-known local anesthetic used by dentists. Lidocaine blocks the perception of pain by inhibiting the action of receptors found on specific nerve cells in the skin, which respond to painful stimuli and transmit signals to the spinal cord.

Neuroreceptors are proteins that span the outer membrane of nerve cells. They possess deformable pores that open in response to appropriate stimuli, and function as conduits that permit electrically charged ions to pass into or out of the cells. The ion channel targeted by the lidocaine-like end of QAQ responds to heat by allowing positively charged sodium ions to pass into the cells that express it. This alters the electrical potential across the membrane, which ultimately leads to transmission of the nerve impulse.

In their experiments, the researchers exploited the fact that QAQ can percolate through endogenous ion channels to get the molecule into nerve cells. This is a crucial step, because its site of action is located on the inner face of the targeted ion channel.

Furthermore, the lidocaine-like end of QAQ binds to this site only if the molecule is in an extended conformation. When the cells were irradiated with 380-nm light, which bends the bridge, signal transmission was reactivated within a matter of milliseconds. Exposure to light with a wavelength of 500 nm, on the other hand, reverts the molecule to the extended form and restores its inhibitory action. The analgesic effect of the switch was confirmed using an animal model.

Trauner‘s team has been working for some considerable time on techniques with which biologically critical molecular machines such as neuroreceptors can be controlled in living animals by means of light impulses. The researchers themselves regard the new method primarily as a tool for neurobiological studies, particularly for pain research. Therapeutic applications of the principle are “a long way off”, says Timm Fehrentz, one of Dirk Trauner’s PhD students and one of the two equal first authors on the new paper. For one thing, the monochromatic light used to isomerize the QAQ molecule cannot penetrate human skin sufficiently to reach the pain-sensitive neurons. The researchers hope to address that problem by looking for alternatives to QAQ that respond to red light of longer wavelength, which more readily passes through the skin. (math/PH)

Publication:
Rapid optical control of nociception with an ion-channel photoswitch
A. Mourot, T. Fehrentz, Y. Le Feuvre, C.M. Smith, C. Herold, D. Dalkara, F. Nagy, D. Trauner & R.H. Kramer
Nature Methods, 19.2.2012
doi: 10.1038/nmeth.1897

http://www.en.uni-muenchen.de/news/newsa...uner1.html



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Thanks given by: Asshole
02-26-2012, 01:28 AM
Post: #2
RE: An OFF switch for pain
If advanced further enough, would it be possible to use this as an alternative to substances like morphine and as an alternative for anesthesia? Basically any painful medical procedures? Needles are a bitch.

"Humans are the most individualistic species I know. If you have three humans in a room, there will be six opinions." ~ Samara
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02-26-2012, 03:31 AM
Post: #3
RE: An OFF switch for pain
(02-26-2012 01:28 AM)Djoser Wrote:  If advanced further enough, would it be possible to use this as an alternative to substances like morphine and as an alternative for anesthesia? Basically any painful medical procedures? Needles are a bitch.

Surgeries have been done without morphine before through hypnosis

http://www.institute-shot.com/hypnosis_pain_utility.htm
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02-26-2012, 04:17 AM
Post: #4
RE: An OFF switch for pain
Hypnosis is a pseudo-scientific theory. At best, it calms one to relax the chemical reactions in the brain. The brain is what controls the neurological sense of feeling pain. It's also possible in tricking people into believing they're taking something in which'll relieve the pain, resulting in their brain triggering endorphins. This is called the placebo effect.



"I want to make a promise to you - the reader. And I don't know if I can fulfill it tomorrow, or even the day after that. But I put the bastards of this world on notice that I do not have their best interests at heart. I will try and speak for my reader. That is my promise. And it will be a voice made of ink and rage." -Paul Kemp, The Rum Diary

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Thanks given by: YaelTheGreat , YaelTheGreat , Asshole
02-26-2012, 04:27 AM
Post: #5
RE: An OFF switch for pain
Double thanks nigga, be grateful...

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Thanks given by: The Vegan Marxist
02-26-2012, 05:49 AM (This post was last modified: 02-26-2012 06:02 AM by GrandWizzard.)
Post: #6
RE: An OFF switch for pain
HOW THE FUCK DO YOU KEEP DOING THAT
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Thanks given by: Gezus , Gezus
02-26-2012, 08:05 AM
Post: #7
RE: An OFF switch for pain
^Trade secret my friend.

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