TY - JOUR T1 - The neurotrophic factor artemin influences the extent of neural damage and growth in chronic pancreatitis JF - Gut JO - Gut SP - 534 LP - 544 DO - 10.1136/gut.2006.105528 VL - 56 IS - 4 AU - Güralp O Ceyhan AU - Frank Bergmann AU - Mustafa Kadihasanoglu AU - Mert Erkan AU - Weon Park AU - Ulf Hinz AU - Thomas Giese AU - Michael W Müller AU - Markus W Büchler AU - Nathalia A Giese AU - Helmut Friess Y1 - 2007/04/01 UR - http://gut.bmj.com/content/56/4/534.abstract N2 - Background and aim: Chronic pancreatitis is characterised by severe abdominal neuropathic pain, perineural inflammatory cell infiltrations and intrapancreatic neural growth. Artemin was recently shown to eliminate neuropathic pain and reverse neurochemical damage after nerve injury. The role of artemin and its receptor GFRα3 was investigated in patients with chronic pancreatitis.Methods: Expression of artemin and its receptor GFRα3 was studied in chronic pancreatitis (n = 66) and normal (n = 22) pancreatic tissues by quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (QRT-PCR) and western blot analysis. Artemin expression was correlated with pain and pathomorphological changes (inflammation, perineural inflammatory cell infiltration, neural alterations and fibrosis). Immunohistochemistry was used to localise artemin and GFRα3 in the tissues. To detect sources of artemin, primary human pancreatic stellate cells (hPSCs) were isolated and analysed by QRT-PCR and immunocytology analysis.Results: In chronic pancreatitis, artemin and GFRα3 were significantly overexpressed and located in smooth muscle cells of arteries, Schwann cells and neural ganglia. Increased levels of artemin mRNA correlated with pain severity, inflammation, perineural inflammatory cell infiltration, neural density and hypertrophy. Furthermore, the severity of fibrosis was positively related with artemin expression and neural alterations. Activated hPSCs expressed low basal levels of artemin mRNA which were upregulated by exposure to transforming growth factor (TGF)β1.Conclusions: Overexpression of artemin in chronic pancreatitis might function as a compensatory upregulation in order to repair neural damage incurred by ongoing pancreatic inflammation. Upregulation of TGFβ1 seems not only to increase pancreatic fibrosis but also to contribute to neural alteration by stimulating artemin expression in hPSCs. However, overexpression of endogenous artemin does not seem to be sufficient to prevent pain in chronic pancreatitis. ER -