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Estrogen Receptor Beta Selective Agonists as Agents to Treat Chemotherapeutic-Induced Neuropathic Pain
21
Citations
31
References
2016
Year
Pain TherapyPain DisordersChemoprevention StrategyPain MedicineGynecologyNeuropathic PainMolecular PainPharmacotherapyMolecular PharmacologyPain ManagementCancer ResearchAnalgesicsHealth SciencesEndocrinologyPharmacologyCell BiologyPain ResearchChemotherapy-induced Neuropathic PainEstrogen Receptor BetaCancer PainChemotherapeutic-induced Neuropathic PainPain MechanismMedicine
Chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain (CINP) remains a major unmet medical need. Estrogen receptor beta (ERβ)-selective agonists represent a novel strategy for treating CINP because they are neuroprotective and may also have anticancer activity. We confirmed that ERβ-selective agonists have antiallodynic effects in the spinal nerve ligation model of neuropathic pain. We then showed that structurally diverse ERβ-selective agonists also relieved allodynia in CINP caused by taxol, oxaliplatin, and vincristine. These effects were receptor subtype specific and mediated by ERβ receptors as ERα-selective and nonselective estrogen agonists were inactive, a mixture of an ERβ and ERα agonist was inactive, and ERβ-selective antagonists blocked the effects of the ERβ-selective agonists. The efficacy and potency of ERβ-agonists was greater in male rats than females. To address the possibility that AC-186 might stimulate proliferation of cancers, rendering it unsuitable for treating CINP, we evaluated proliferative effects of AC-186 on prostate cancer cells and found it inhibited growth (LNCaP cells) or had no effect (PC3 cells) on these cells. Thus, ERβ-selective agonists exhibit potential for treating CINP.
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