Peter T Ohara

University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

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Publications (27)130.25 Total impact

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    Dataset: Neuron Glia Biology Cover 2006
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    Dataset: J.Neuroscience Cover 2008
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    Dataset: J.Neurophysiology Cover 2008
  • Article: Orofacial pain models and behavior assessment.
    Timothy K Y Kaan, Peter T Ohara, Luc Jasmin
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    ABSTRACT: Orofacial pain remains an understudied area in pain research given that most attention has been focused on the spinal system. In this chapter, animal models of neuropathic and inflammatory orofacial pain are presented. Four different types of pain behavior tests are then described for assessing evoked and spontaneous pain behavior in addition to conditional reward behavior. The use of a combination of different pain models and behavior assessments is needed to aid in understanding the mechanisms contributing to orofacial pain in humans for developing effective therapy.
    Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.) 01/2012; 851:159-70.
  • Chapter: Central Nervous System Stimulation for Pain
    Mary O. Adedoyin, Peter T. Ohara, Luc Jasmin
    01/2011;
  • Article: Close encounters of the third kind: evidence for contact with TNF-alpha.
    Luc Jasmin, Peter T Ohara
    Pain 11/2010; 151(2):241-2. · 5.78 Impact Factor
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    Article: Can satellite glial cells be therapeutic targets for pain control?
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    ABSTRACT: Satellite glial cells (SGCs) undergo phenotypic changes and divide the following injury into a peripheral nerve. Nerve injury, also elicits an immune response and several antigen-presenting cells are found in close proximity to SGCs. Silencing SCG-specific molecules involved in intercellular transport (Connexin 43) or glutamate recycling (glutamine synthase) can dramatically alter nociceptive responses of normal and nerve-injured rats. Transducing SGCs with glutamic acid decarboxylase can produce analgesia in models of trigeminal pain. Taken together these data suggest that SGCs may play a role in the genesis or maintenance of pain and open a range of new possibilities for curing neuropathic pain.
    Neuron Glia Biology 02/2010; 6(1):63-71. · 1.34 Impact Factor
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    Article: Temporomandibular joint inflammation activates glial and immune cells in both the trigeminal ganglia and in the spinal trigeminal nucleus.
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    ABSTRACT: Glial cells have been shown to directly participate to the genesis and maintenance of chronic pain in both the sensory ganglia and the central nervous system (CNS). Indeed, glial cell activation has been reported in both the dorsal root ganglia and the spinal cord following injury or inflammation of the sciatic nerve, but no data are currently available in animal models of trigeminal sensitization. Therefore, in the present study, we evaluated glial cell activation in the trigeminal-spinal system following injection of the Complete Freund's Adjuvant (CFA) into the temporomandibular joint, which generates inflammatory pain and trigeminal hypersensitivity. CFA-injected animals showed ipsilateral mechanical allodynia and temporomandibular joint edema, accompanied in the trigeminal ganglion by a strong increase in the number of GFAP-positive satellite glial cells encircling neurons and by the activation of resident macrophages. Seventy-two hours after CFA injection, activated microglial cells were observed in the ipsilateral trigeminal subnucleus caudalis and in the cervical dorsal horn, with a significant up-regulation of Iba1 immunoreactivity, but no signs of reactive astrogliosis were detected in the same areas. Since the purinergic system has been implicated in the activation of microglial cells during neuropathic pain, we have also evaluated the expression of the microglial-specific P2Y12 receptor subtype. No upregulation of this receptor was detected following induction of TMJ inflammation, suggesting that any possible role of P2Y12 in this paradigm of inflammatory pain does not involve changes in receptor expression. Our data indicate that specific glial cell populations become activated in both the trigeminal ganglia and the CNS following induction of temporomandibular joint inflammation, and suggest that they might represent innovative targets for controlling pain during trigeminal nerve sensitization.
    Molecular Pain 01/2010; 6:89. · 3.53 Impact Factor
  • Article: Seizures, enhanced excitation, and increased vesicle number in Lis1 mutant mice.
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    ABSTRACT: In humans, abnormal neuronal migration and severe neuronal disorganization resulting from Lis1 (lissencephaly) haploinsufficiency contributes to cognitive impairment and seizures early in life. In Lis1 heterozygotic mice, severe hippocampal disorganization and cognitive impairment have also been reported. Using this mouse model, we examined the functional impact of LIS1 deficiency with particular focus on excitatory glutamate-mediated synaptic transmission. We used visualized patch-clamp recordings in acute hippocampal slices. We recorded spontaneous, miniature and stimulation-evoked excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC). Additional mice were processed for immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy (EM), or video-electroencephalographic (EEG) monitoring. Video-EEG confirmed the presence of spontaneous electrographic seizures in Lis1 mutant mice. In disorganized hippocampal slices from Lis1(+/-) mice, we noted a nearly two-fold significant increase in the frequency of spontaneous and miniature EPSC; no significant change in amplitude or decay was noted. Synaptic function assessed using brief repetitive or paired-pulse stimulation protocols, also revealed significant enhancement of glutamate-mediated excitation. Low concentrations of cadmium, a nonspecific blocker of voltage-dependent calcium channels mediating vesicle release, effectively restored paired-pulse facilitation deficits back to control levels. Analysis of synapse ultrastructure at the EM level identified a large increase in synaptic vesicle number. Seizure activity, possibly associated with increased glutamate-mediated excitation and an increased pool of vesicles at the presynaptic site, was demonstrated in a mouse model of type I lissencephaly.
    Annals of Neurology 11/2009; 66(5):644-53. · 11.09 Impact Factor
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    Article: Gliopathic pain: when satellite glial cells go bad.
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    ABSTRACT: Neurons in sensory ganglia are surrounded by satellite glial cells (SGCs) that perform similar functions to the glia found in the CNS. When primary sensory neurons are injured, the surrounding SGCs undergo characteristic changes. There is good evidence that the SGCs are not just bystanders to the injury but play an active role in the initiation and maintenance of neuronal changes that underlie neuropathic pain. In this article the authors review the literature on the relationship between SGCs and nociception and present evidence that changes in SGC potassium ion buffering capacity and glutamate recycling can lead to neuropathic pain-like behavior in animal models. The role that SGCs play in the immune responses to injury is also considered. We propose the term gliopathic pain to describe those conditions in which central or peripheral glia are thought to be the principal generators of principal pain generators.
    The Neuroscientist 10/2009; 15(5):450-63. · 4.57 Impact Factor
  • Article: Pain free and awake to enjoy it!
    Luc Jasmin, Peter T Ohara
    Pain 02/2009; 141(3):187-8. · 5.78 Impact Factor
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    Article: Chronic constriction injury of the infraorbital nerve in the rat using modified syringe needle.
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    ABSTRACT: Here we report a method for performing a chronic constriction injury (CCI) of the infraorbital nerve (ION) in the rat as a component of a chronic pain model. The surgical approach to the ION is described together with the use of a modified dental syringe needle that simplifies placing two chromic gut ligatures around the ION. This method makes the surgical procedure easier, the nerve injury more consistent across animals and reduces secondary damage to the ION and surrounding tissue. Pain behavior testing together with immunostaining for markers of nerve injury in the spinal trigeminal nucleus show the suitability of this procedure as a model of orofacial pain.
    Journal of Neuroscience Methods 08/2008; 172(1):43-7. · 1.98 Impact Factor
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    Article: Silencing the Kir4.1 potassium channel subunit in satellite glial cells of the rat trigeminal ganglion results in pain-like behavior in the absence of nerve injury.
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    ABSTRACT: Growing evidence suggests that changes in the ion buffering capacity of glial cells can give rise to neuropathic pain. In the CNS, potassium ion (K+) buffering is dependent on the glia-specific inward rectifying K+ channel Kir4.1. We recently reported that the satellite glial cells that surround primary sensory neurons located in sensory ganglia of the peripheral nervous system also express Kir4.1, whereas the neurons do not. In the present study, we show that, in the rat trigeminal ganglion, the location of the primary sensory neurons for face sensation, specific silencing of Kir4.1 using RNA interference leads to spontaneous and evoked facial pain-like behavior in freely moving rats. We also show that Kir4.1 in the trigeminal ganglion is reduced after chronic constriction injury of the infraorbital nerve. These findings suggests that neuropathic pain can result from a change in expression of a single K+ channel in peripheral glial cells, raising the possibility of targeting Kir4.1 to treat pain in general and particularly neuropathic pain that occurs in the absence of nerve injury.
    Journal of Neuroscience 05/2008; 28(16):4161-71. · 7.11 Impact Factor
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    Article: Satellite glial cells in the trigeminal ganglion as a determinant of orofacial neuropathic pain.
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    ABSTRACT: Satellite glial cells (SGCs) tightly envelop the perikarya of primary sensory neurons in peripheral ganglion and are identified by their morphology and the presence of proteins not found in ganglion neurons. These SGC-unique proteins include the inwardly rectifying K(+) channel Kir4.1, the connexin-43 (Cx43) subunit of gap junctions, the purinergic receptor P2Y4 and soluble guanylate cyclase. We also present evidence that the small-conductance Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channel SK3 is present only in SGCs and that SGCs divide following nerve injury. All the above proteins are involved, either directly or indirectly, in potassium ion (K(+)) buffering and, thus, can influence the level of neuronal excitability, which, in turn, has been associated with neuropathic pain conditions. We used in vivo RNA interference to reduce the expression of Cx43 (present only in SGCs) in the rat trigeminal ganglion and show that this results in the development of spontaneous pain behavior. The pain behavior is present only when Cx43 is reduced and returns to normal when Cx43 concentrations are restored. This finding shows that perturbation of a single SGC-specific protein is sufficient to induce pain responses and demonstrates the importance of PNS glial cell activity in the pathophysiology of neuropathic pain.
    Neuron Glia Biology 12/2006; 2(4):247-57. · 1.34 Impact Factor
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    Article: Analgesia and hyperalgesia from CRF receptor modulation in the central nervous system of Fischer and Lewis rats.
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    ABSTRACT: This study examines the contribution of central corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) to pain behavior. CRF is the principal modulator of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, in addition to acting on many other areas of the central nervous system. We compared nociceptive thresholds (heat and mechanical) and pain behavior in response to a sustained stimulus (formalin test) between Fischer and Lewis rats that have different HPA axis activity. Intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) administration of CRF produced dose-dependent antinociception at a lower dose in Lewis (40 ng, paw pinch 71+/-0 g) compared to Fischer rats (200 ng, 112+/-3 g). The antinociceptive effect of CRF was mostly preserved in adrenalectomized Fischer rats. The i.c.v. administration of the CRF receptor antagonist, astressin, had a hyperalgesic effect, suggesting that CRF is tonically active. Lewis rats required higher doses of astressin (5 ng, paw pinch 51+/-1 g) to show nociceptive effects compared to Fischer rats (1 ng, 79+/-1 g). Only Lewis rats vocalized during mechanical stimulus, and this behavior was prevented by diazepam or morphine but was worsened by CRF, despite its antinociceptive property. In the formalin test, CRF and astressin had the largest effect on the interphase suggesting that they act on the endogenous pain inhibitory system. CRF also increased anxiety/fear-like behaviors in the forced swim and predator odor tests. Our results establish that central CRF is a key modulator of pain behavior and indicates that CRF effects on nociception are largely independent of its mood modulating effect as well as its control of the HPA axis.
    Pain 05/2006; 121(3):241-60. · 5.78 Impact Factor
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    Article: The analgesic effect of low dose focal irradiation in a mouse model of bone cancer is associated with spinal changes in neuro-mediators of nociception.
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    ABSTRACT: Despite the widespread use of radiotherapy to treat painful bone metastases, the mechanism underlying the analgesic effect of low dose ionizing radiation is unknown. Bone cancer pain is mostly associated with an inflammatory response dominated by local activation of osteoclasts and by astrogliosis in the spinal cord. We determined the effects of a 6 Gy irradiation given focally on osteolytic sarcoma cells inoculated in humeri of mice. Pain behavior was assessed using the rota-rod and the grip force test. Seven days post-irradiation (day 17 post-tumor implantation) the performance of mice markedly improved on the rotarod (non-irradiated, 67+/-16s vs irradiated, 223 +/- 22 s; P = 0.0005), and the grip force test (non-irradiated, 34 +/- 4 g vs irradiated, 55 +/- 2 g; P = 0.001). This improvement was similar to the analgesia achieved with 30 mg/kg of the cyclooxygenase (COX) inhibitor ketorolac (Rota-rod, 67 +/- 16 s vs 178 +/- 35 s; P = 0.01: grip force test, 34 +/- 4 g, vs 60 +/- 5 g; P = 0.003). Following irradiation, the tumor mass and the number of osteoclasts did not decrease while the expression of two pro-inflammatory cytokines (monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1 and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha) increased. Tumor irradiation led to clear differences in the spinal cord. These include a decrease in glial activity (astrocytes and microglial cells) as well as pain mediators such as dynorphin, COX-2 and chemotactic cytokine receptor (CCR2). We conclude that the analgesic effect of low dose irradiation of bone cancer is associated with the alteration of nociceptive transmission in the central nervous system.
    Pain 02/2006; 120(1-2):188-201. · 5.78 Impact Factor
  • Article: Recurrent paraplegia after remyelination of the spinal cord.
    Luc Jasmin, Peter T Ohara
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    ABSTRACT: We have conducted a long-term study of spinal cord morphology and motor function recovery in rats that have undergone lumbar spinal demyelination induced by the B-fragment of cholera toxin (CTB)-saporin. We found that, after the initial demyelination and paraplegia, motor function recovered and was stable for up to 9 months, after which there occurred a slow deterioration of motor function accompanied by loss of motoneurons and loss of spinal white matter. A striking morphological feature was the appearance of large spheroids of calcium in the ventral and dorsal horns and occasionally in the white matter. Motor performance deterioration occurred earlier and was more severe in rats that had been exercised on a treadmill, but the same morphological changes occurred in both exercise- and nonexercise-treated animals. Rats given treadmill exercise starting 3 weeks after toxin injection had a mean motor deficit score of 3.0 (i.e., paraplegia) at perfusion, whereas the nontreadmill-treated rats had a mean score of 1.8 (SD 0.38; n = 6; P <.05). These findings suggest that, in addition to the acute effects of the toxin-induced demyelination from which there is recovery of motor function, there are chronic irreversible effects of the toxin, or the initial demyelination, that cause a slow progressive degeneration of the spinal cord. This model might therefore be useful in studying the long-term effects of spinal insult of the type associated with conditions such as postpolio syndrome.
    Journal of Neuroscience Research 07/2004; 77(2):277-84. · 2.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Rostral agranular insular cortex and pain areas of the central nervous system: a tract-tracing study in the rat.
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    ABSTRACT: The rostral agranular insular cortex (RAIC) has recently been identified as a site where local changes in GABA and dopamine levels, or application of opioids, can alter nociceptive thresholds in awake animals. The connections of the cortex dorsal to the rhinal fissure that includes the RAIC have been examined previously, with emphasis on visceral and gustatory functions but not nociception. Here we examined the afferent and efferent connections of the RAIC with sites implicated in nociceptive processing. Sensory information from the thalamus reaches the RAIC via the submedius and central lateral nuclei and the parvicellular part of the ventral posterior nucleus. The RAIC has extensive reciprocal cortico-cortical connections with the orbital, infralimbic, and anterior cingulate cortices and with the contralateral RAIC. The amygdala, particularly the basal complex, and the nucleus accumbens are important targets of RAIC efferent fibers. Other connections include projections to lateral hypothalamus, dorsal raphe, periaqueductal gray matter, pericerulear region, rostroventral medulla, and parabrachial nuclei. The connectivity of the RAIC suggests it is involved in multiple aspects of pain behavior. Projections to the RAIC from medial thalamic nuclei are associated with motivational/affective components of pain. RAIC projections to mesolimbic/mesocortical ventral forebrain circuits are likely to participate in the sensorimotor integration of nociceptive processing, while its brainstem projections are most likely to contribute to descending pain inhibitory control.
    The Journal of Comparative Neurology 02/2004; 468(3):425-40. · 3.81 Impact Factor
  • Article: Anatomical identification of neurons responsive to nociceptive stimuli.
    Luc Jasmin, Peter T Ohara
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    ABSTRACT: We describe methods for labeling and identifying neurons within the central nervous system involved in the transmission of nociceptive stimuli. The most reliable methods are physiological identification followed by intracellular injection or immunocytochemical detection of stimulus-induced markers such as Fos. These latter strategies are used with appropriate controls to distinguish neurons activated secondarily (e.g., motor response or inhibitory neurons) by the nociceptive stimuli. Other methods include location and morphology as determined by standard cytological and tracing methods and/or the presence of specific neurochemical markers such as substance P determined by immunocytochemistry.
    Methods in molecular medicine 02/2004; 99:167-88.
  • Article: Is noradrenaline a significant factor in the analgesic effect of antidepressants?
    Pain 12/2003; 106(1-2):3-8. · 5.78 Impact Factor