Fig 1.
The antinociceptive effects produced by the intraperitoneal administration of CoPP at 5 and 10 mg/kg in STZ injected mice.
The development of mechanical allodynia (A), thermal hyperalgesia (B) and thermal allodynia (C) in the hind paws of control and diabetic mice intraperitoneally treated with vehicle or CoPP at 5 and 10 mg/kg from day 21 to day 25 after STZ injection is shown. Data of tests are shown at day 0 (before diabetes induction) and at days 21 and 25 after STZ injection (one and five days after initiation of CoPP administration, respectively). Data are expressed as von Frey filaments strength (g) for mechanical allodynia, withdrawal latency (s) for thermal hyperalgesia and paw lifts (number) for thermal allodynia. For each day, * indicates significant differences vs. CTRL mice (p< 0.05, one-way ANOVA followed by the Student Newman Keuls test) and + indicates significant differences vs. STZ mice treated with CoPP at 10 mg/kg (p< 0.05, one-way ANOVA followed by the Student Newman Keuls test). The results are shown as the mean values ± SEM; n = 6–8 animals per group.
Fig 2.
Effects of the subcutaneous administration of morphine on the mechanical allodynia, thermal hyperalgesia and thermal allodynia induced by the administration of STZ.
Mechanical antiallodynic (A), thermal antihyperalgesic (B) and thermal antiallodynic (C) effects produced by the subcutaneous administration of different doses of morphine in STZ-injected mice. Data are expressed as von Frey filaments strength (g) for mechanical allodynia, withdrawal latency (s) for thermal hyperalgesia and paw lifts (number) for thermal allodynia. For each test, * denotes significant differences versus saline treated mice (0 mg/kg) (p< 0.05; one-way ANOVA followed by the Student Newman Keuls test). The results are shown as the mean values ± SEM; n = 6 animals for dose.
Fig 3.
Effects of CoPP treatment on the antiallodynic and antihyperalgesic responses to morphine.
Mechanical antiallodynic (A), thermal antihyperalgesic (B), and thermal antiallodynic (C) effects of the subcutaneous administration of 0.5 mg/kg of morphine or saline in STZ-injected mice pretreated with vehicle (DMSO 1%) or 10 mg/kg of CoPP. The effects of the intraperitoneal administration of CoPP alone are also shown. Data are expressed as von Frey filaments strength (g) for mechanical allodynia, withdrawal latency (s) for thermal hyperalgesia and paw lifts (number) for thermal allodynia. For each behavioral test, * denotes significant differences versus control group treated with vehicle plus saline (p< 0.05, one-way ANOVA followed by Student Newman Keuls test), + denotes significant differences versus group treated with vehicle plus morphine (p< 0.05, one-way ANOVA followed by the Student Newman Keuls test) and # denotes significant differences versus group treated with CoPP plus saline (p< 0.05; one-way ANOVA followed by the Student Newman Keuls test).
Table 1.
Mechanical response (von Frey filaments strength, g), thermal heat response (withdrawal latency, s) and thermal cold response (paw lifts, number) on the hind paws of STZ injected mice treated with vehicle-saline, vehicle-morphine, SnPP-saline or SnPP-morphine.
Fig 4.
Effect of CoPP treatment on HO-1 protein expression in the spinal cord, dorsal root ganglia and sciatic nerve from STZ-injected mice.
The protein expression of HO-1 in the spinal cord (A), dorsal root ganglia (B) and sciatic nerve (C) from STZ-injected mice treated with vehicle or CoPP is represented. The expression of HO-1 in the spinal cord, dorsal root ganglia and sciatic nerve from CTRL mice treated with vehicle has been also represented as controls. For each tissue, * indicates significant differences when compared to CTRL mice (p< 0.05, one-way ANOVA followed by Student Newman Keuls test) and + when compared to STZ vehicle treated mice (p< 0.05, one-way ANOVA followed by Student Newman Keuls test). Representative examples of western blots for HO-1 (32 kDa) in which β-actin (42 kDa) was used as a loading control, are also shown. Data are expressed as the relative expression ± SEM; n = 4 samples per group.
Fig 5.
Effect of CoPP treatment on CD11b/c, NOS2 and MOR protein expression in the spinal cord from STZ-injected mice.
The protein expression of CD11b/c (A), NOS2 (B) and MOR (C) in the spinal cord from STZ-injected mice treated with vehicle or CoPP is represented. The expression of CD11b/c, NOS2 and MOR from CTRL mice treated with vehicle has been also represented as controls. For each protein, * indicates significant differences when compared to CTRL animals (p< 0.05, one-way ANOVA followed by Student Newman Keuls test), + indicates significant differences when compared to STZ vehicle treated animals (p< 0.05, one-way ANOVA followed by Student Newman Keuls test) and # indicates significant differences when compared to STZ-CoPP treated animals (p< 0.05, one-way ANOVA followed by Student Newman Keuls test). Representative examples of western blots for CD11b/c (160 kDa), NOS2 (130 kDa) and MOR (50 kDa) proteins, in which β-actin (42 kDa) was used as a loading control, are also shown. Data are expressed as the relative expression ± SEM; n = 4 samples per group.