» Articles » PMID: 20220009

Bradykinin and Nerve Growth Factor Play Pivotal Roles in Muscular Mechanical Hyperalgesia After Exercise (delayed-onset Muscle Soreness)

Overview
Journal J Neurosci
Specialty Neurology
Date 2010 Mar 12
PMID 20220009
Citations 75
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Unaccustomed strenuous exercise that includes lengthening contraction (LC) often causes delayed-onset muscle soreness (DOMS), a kind of muscular mechanical hyperalgesia. The substances that induce this phenomenon are largely unknown. Peculiarly, DOMS is not perceived during and shortly after exercise, but rather is first perceived after approximately 1 d. Using B(2) bradykinin receptor antagonist HOE 140, we show here that bradykinin released during exercise plays a pivotal role in triggering the process that leads to muscular mechanical hyperalgesia. HOE 140 completely suppressed the development of muscular mechanical hyperalgesia when injected before LC, but when injected 2 d after LC failed to reverse mechanical hyperalgesia that had already developed. B(1) antagonist was ineffective, regardless of the timing of its injection. Upregulation of nerve growth factor (NGF) mRNA and protein occurred in exercised muscle over a comparable time course (12 h to 2 d after LC) for muscle mechanical hyperalgesia. Antibodies to NGF injected intramuscularly 2 d after exercise reversed muscle mechanical hyperalgesia. HOE 140 inhibited the upregulation of NGF. In contrast, shortening contraction or stretching induced neither mechanical hyperalgesia nor NGF upregulation. Bradykinin together with shortening contraction, but not bradykinin alone, reproduced lasting mechanical hyperalgesia. We also showed that rat NGF sensitized thin-fiber afferents to mechanical stimulation in the periphery after 10-20 min. Thus, NGF upregulation through activation of B(2) bradykinin receptors is essential (though not satisfactory) to mechanical hyperalgesia after exercise. The present observations explain why DOMS occurs with a delay, and why lengthening contraction but not shortening contraction induces DOMS.

Citing Articles

Delayed-Onset Muscle Soreness Begins with a Transient Neural Switch.

Sonkodi B Int J Mol Sci. 2025; 26(5).

PMID: 40076941 PMC: 11901069. DOI: 10.3390/ijms26052319.


Influence of combined transcranial and peripheral electromagnetic stimulation on the autonomous nerve system on delayed onset muscle soreness in young athletes: a randomized clinical trial.

Keriven H, Sierra A, Gonzalez-de-la-Flor A, Arrabe M, de la Plaza San Frutos M, Maestro A J Transl Med. 2025; 23(1):306.

PMID: 40065317 PMC: 11895214. DOI: 10.1186/s12967-025-06238-3.


Progressive Irreversible Proprioceptive Piezo2 Channelopathy-Induced Lost Forced Peripheral Oscillatory Synchronization to the Hippocampal Oscillator May Explain the Onset of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Pathomechanism.

Sonkodi B Cells. 2024; 13(6.

PMID: 38534336 PMC: 10969524. DOI: 10.3390/cells13060492.


Neurochemical mechanism of muscular pain: Insight from the study on delayed onset muscle soreness.

Mizumura K, Taguchi T J Physiol Sci. 2024; 74(1):4.

PMID: 38267849 PMC: 10809664. DOI: 10.1186/s12576-023-00896-y.


Repeated cold stress, an animal model for fibromyalgia, elicits proprioceptor-induced chronic pain with microglial activation in mice.

Wakatsuki K, Kiryu-Seo S, Yasui M, Yokota H, Kida H, Konishi H J Neuroinflammation. 2024; 21(1):25.

PMID: 38238800 PMC: 10795366. DOI: 10.1186/s12974-024-03018-6.


References
1.
Fjell J, Cummins T, Davis B, Albers K, Fried K, Waxman S . Sodium channel expression in NGF-overexpressing transgenic mice. J Neurosci Res. 1999; 57(1):39-47. DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-4547(19990701)57:1<39::AID-JNR5>3.0.CO;2-M. View

2.
Blais Jr C, Adam A, Massicotte D, Peronnet F . Increase in blood bradykinin concentration after eccentric weight-training exercise in men. J Appl Physiol (1985). 1999; 87(3):1197-201. DOI: 10.1152/jappl.1999.87.3.1197. View

3.
Shu X, Mendell L . Nerve growth factor acutely sensitizes the response of adult rat sensory neurons to capsaicin. Neurosci Lett. 1999; 274(3):159-62. DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3940(99)00701-6. View

4.
Taguchi T, Kishikawa H, Motoshima H, Sakai K, Nishiyama T, Yoshizato K . Involvement of bradykinin in acute exercise-induced increase of glucose uptake and GLUT-4 translocation in skeletal muscle: studies in normal and diabetic humans and rats. Metabolism. 2000; 49(7):920-30. DOI: 10.1053/meta.2000.6755. View

5.
Takano M, Sakanaka F, Yayama K, Okamoto H . Tissue-Specific expression of rat kininogen mRNAs. Biol Pharm Bull. 2000; 23(10):1239-42. DOI: 10.1248/bpb.23.1239. View