Acetaldehyde via CGRP receptor and TRPA1 in Schwann cells mediates ethanol-evoked periorbital mechanical allodynia in mice: relevance for migraine
Landini L, Souza Monteiro de Araujo D, Chieca M, De Siena G, Bellantoni E, Geppetti P, Nassini R, De Logu F. Acetaldehyde via CGRP receptor and TRPA1 in Schwann cells mediates ethanol-evoked periorbital mechanical allodynia in mice: relevance for migraine. J Biomed Sci. 2023 Apr 26;30(1):28. doi: 10.1186/s12929-023-00922-6.
Abstract
Background: Ingestion of alcoholic beverages is a known trigger of migraine attacks. However, whether and how ethanol exerts its pro-migraine action remains poorly known. Ethanol stimulates the transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) channel, and its dehydrogenized metabolite, acetaldehyde, is a known TRP ankyrin 1 (TRPA1) agonist.
Methods: Periorbital mechanical allodynia following systemic ethanol and acetaldehyde was investigated in mice after TRPA1 and TRPV1 pharmacological antagonism and global genetic deletion. Mice with selective silencing of the receptor activated modifying protein 1 (RAMP1), a component of the calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor, in Schwann cells or TRPA1 in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons or Schwann cells, were used after systemic ethanol and acetaldehyde.
Results: We show in mice that intragastric ethanol administration evokes a sustained periorbital mechanical allodynia that is attenuated by systemic or local alcohol dehydrogenase inhibition, and TRPA1, but not TRPV1, global deletion, thus indicating the implication of acetaldehyde. Systemic (intraperitoneal) acetaldehyde administration also evokes periorbital mechanical allodynia. Importantly, periorbital mechanical allodynia by both ethanol and acetaldehyde is abrogated by pretreatment with the CGRP receptor antagonist, olcegepant, and a selective silencing of RAMP1 in Schwann cells. Periorbital mechanical allodynia by ethanol and acetaldehyde is also attenuated by cyclic AMP, protein kinase A, and nitric oxide inhibition and pretreatment with an antioxidant. Moreover, selective genetic silencing of TRPA1 in Schwann cells or DRG neurons attenuated periorbital mechanical allodynia by ethanol or acetaldehyde.
Conclusions: Results suggest that, in mice, periorbital mechanical allodynia, a response that mimics cutaneous allodynia reported during migraine attacks, is elicited by ethanol via the systemic production of acetaldehyde that, by releasing CGRP, engages the CGRP receptor in Schwann cells. The ensuing cascade of intracellular events results in a Schwann cell TRPA1-dependent oxidative stress generation that eventually targets neuronal TRPA1 to signal allodynia from the periorbital area.