Michael Costigan - US grants
Affiliations: | Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA |
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High-probability grants
According to our matching algorithm, Michael Costigan is the likely recipient of the following grants.Years | Recipients | Code | Title / Keywords | Matching score |
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2005 — 2006 | Costigan, Michael | R03Activity Code Description: To provide research support specifically limited in time and amount for studies in categorical program areas. Small grants provide flexibility for initiating studies which are generally for preliminary short-term projects and are non-renewable. |
The Genetic Basis of Pain Sensitivity @ Massachusetts General Hospital DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): More than 10% of patients undergoing a simple inguinal hernia repair have neuropathic pain at the site two years postsurgery. The presence of the persistent pain does not appear though to depend on either surgical technique or the extent of damage to the ilioinguinal nerves. These findings suggest that a genetic component contributes to the risk of developing post-surgical neuropathic pain. Transection of the peripheral axons of primary sensory neurons results in alterations in their metabolism, regenerative capacity, survival, excitability and transmitter function, and we find using microarrays, that many hundreds of genes are regulated in the dorsal root ganglion following a peripheral nerve injury (Costigan et al, 2002). A major challenge is to identify which of the injury-regulated genes establish and maintain the pain, and whether the genes contributes to an increased susceptibility to develop neuropathic pain. To address this issue we have perfomed a pilot study using whole genome expression arrays to study the transcription profiles of DRGs in two closely related strains of rats with different neuroapthic pain phenotypes. We examined rats congenic for a high or a low autotomy phenotype following peripheral nerve transection (HA and LA respectively). Of 31,000 transcripts assayed in the DRG of naive and nerve-injured HA and LA rats, we find two that show a significant differential regulation between the strains; a full length EST with no known homology and a serine protease inhibitor. The protease inhibitor is substantially upregulated in the LA (low neuropathic pain sensitivity) strain and not in the HA (high neuropathic pain sensitivity) rats. Serine proteases activate bradykinin as well as many other neuoractive proteins and have been implicated in producing neuropathic pain. We hypothesise that the serine protease inhibitor regulates the level of axonal hypersensitivity and ectopic activity after nerve injury. To study this we propose to: 1. Characterize the expression of the serine protease inhibitor within the DRGs of HA / LA rats and in C57/BI6 / DBA/2 mice, both in naive animals and after nerve injury, and 2.Characterize the serine protease inhibitor's function in vivo using conditional overexpressing transgenic animals. We will create transgenic mice that will express the serine protease inhibitor at high levels in sensory neurons or non neuronal cells following nerve injury, and predict that this should, by mimicking the expression in the LA rats, decrease pain hypersensitivity in diverse neuropathic models. |
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2012 — 2016 | Costigan, Michael | R01Activity Code Description: To support a discrete, specified, circumscribed project to be performed by the named investigator(s) in an area representing his or her specific interest and competencies. |
The Mechanisms of Action of T-Lymphocytes in Neuropathic Pain @ Children's Hospital Corporation DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Regardless of the scale of peripheral nerve damage, human neonates usually suffer no chronic neuropathic pain. However, by early adulthood, this situation is starkly different, with rates of chronic pain related to the severity of nerve injury, genetic makeup and as yet undetermined risk factors. Rodents display similar age related traits in differential neuropathic hypersensitivity and we have used this phenomenon to perform a whole genome expression screen of the spinal dorsal horns ipsilateral to the injured sciatic nerve from neonates (with no hypersensitivity) and adults (with chronic pain-like symptoms). We found virtually all of the genes regulated in the adult, but not in the neonate were immune related, and within this group we found evidence for the presence of two cell types, microglia and T lymphocytes. As we had previously characterized the role of microglia, we further defined the role of T cells in this process. Preventing T cell function in adult animals resulted in marke decreases in pain-like behavior, suggesting that T cell migration into the nervous system was a crucial part of chronic neuropathic pain, a mechanism that has remained largely unrecognized to date. Here we wish to define this system further, by (1) blocking leukocyte action and infiltration in adult animals subject to peripheral nerve injury; (2) investigating the mechanisms f T cell recruitment to the sciatic nerve injury site (neuroma), the dorsal root ganglion, and the dorsal horn following nerve injury; (3) separating and defining the individual roles of the T helpe cell subtypes (Th1, Th2, Th17 and T regulatory) by gain and loss of function techniques. PUBLIC HEALTH RELEVANCE: Neuropathic pain is a chronic disease with few effective therapies that destroys the lives of those that suffer its devastating consequences. Its treatment thus represents a major unmet clinical need. We have found that immune cells from the blood (T cells) infiltrate the peripheral nervous system and spinal cord following injury to peripheral sensory nerves and contribute to this pain. We believe we have found an important new mechanism of neuropathic pain, one with existing therapies designed for other conditions that may prove beneficial in reducing chronic pain symptoms. |
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