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ARA 290

Cibinetide, PHBSP, PH-BSP, Helix B surface peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 51
Trials 5
Score 2
2014 pubmed 36 citations

ARA 290, a peptide derived from the tertiary structure of erythropoietin, produces long-term relief of neuropathic pain coupled with suppression of the spinal microglia response.

Swartjes. Maarten M; van Velzen. Monique M; Niesters. Marieke M; Aarts. Leon L; Brines. Michael M; Dunne. Ann A; Cerami. Anthony A; Dahan. Albert A

Key Findings

  • ARA‑290 lowered mechanical and cold allodynia in a dose‑dependent way, with effects lasting up to 20 weeks after treatment.
  • Doses of 10 and 30 µg/kg prevented the usual increase in spinal microglia (iba‑1 immunoreactivity) seen after nerve injury.
  • Astrocyte activation (GFAP immunoreactivity) was not affected by the peptide.

Practical Outcomes

  • The study suggests that ARA‑290 can provide long‑term relief of neuropathic pain by dampening microglial inflammation, but it’s only been tested in rats. For biohackers, the data are not yet ready to translate into a safe human dosing protocol, though the dose range (3‑60 µg/kg) and the importance of targeting microglia may guide future experimentation or clinical trial interest.

Summary

In rats with nerve injury, the peptide ARA‑290 reduced pain sensitivity (both mechanical and cold) for up to five months. The pain relief was strongest at doses of 10‑30 µg/kg and was linked to a drop in spinal microglia activation, a type of brain‑spine inflammation. No change was seen in astrocyte activity.

Abstract

Neuropathic pain is a difficult to treat disorder arising from central or peripheral nervous system lesions. The etiology of neuropathic pain consists of several overlapping pathways converging into an exaggerated pain state with symptoms such as allodynia and hyperalgesia. One of these pathways involves activation of spinal cord microglia and astrocytes, which drive and maintain the inflammatory response following the lesion. These cells are a potential target for drugs for neuropathic pain relief. In this current study, we investigated the dose-effect relationship of the tissue protective peptide ARA 290, derived from the tertiary structure of erythropoietin, on allodynia and concurrent spinal cord microglia and astrocytes. Following a spared nerve injury in rats, vehicle or ARA290 (administered in either one of 4 doses: 3, 10, 30 and 60 μg/kg) was administered on days 1, 3, 6, 8 and 10. ARA290 exerted a dose-response effect by significantly reducing mechanical allodynia up to 20 weeks when compared to vehicle. The reduction of cold allodynia was significant up to 20 weeks for the doses 3, 10, 30 and 60 μg/kg when compared to vehicle. The effect 10 and 30 μg/kg ARA290 and vehicle on the microglia response (iba-1-immunoreactivity, iba-1-IR) and astrocyte reaction (GFAP-immunoreactivity, GFAP-IR) was investigated in animals surviving 2 (group 1) or 20 (group 2) weeks following lesion or sham surgery. In group 1, significant microglia reactivity was observed in the L5 segment of the spinal cord of animals treated with vehicle when compared to sham operated, while animals treated with 10 or 30 μg/kg did not show a increase. In group 2, a more widespread and increased microglia reactivity was observed for animals treated with 0 and 10 μg/kg when compared to sham operated animals, indicated by involvement of more spinal cord segments and higher iba-1-IR. Animals treated with 30 μg/kg did not show increased microglia reactivity. No difference in astrocyte reaction was observed. The erythropoietin-analogue ARA290 dose-dependently reduced allodynia coupled to suppression of the spinal microglia response, suggestive of a mechanistic link between ARA290-induced suppression of central inflammation and relief of neuropathic pain symptoms.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2014

Date

2014-02-16T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1186/1744-8069-10-13

Citations

36

References

57