ReferenceID 4925

Citric Acid in Drug Formulations Causes Pain by Potentiating Acid-Sensing Ion Channel 1

J Neurosci

Pain at the injection site is a common complaint of patients receiving therapeutic formulations containing citric acid. Despite the widely acknowledged role of acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) in acid-related perception

Back to Browse

Relationship Network

Interactive first-hop connections across herbs, ingredients, formulas, targets, diseases, symptoms, syndromes, evidence, and monographs.

Click a node to open it in a new tab
Ingredient: 1Reference: 1Links: 1
Arranging relationship network...

Record Fields

Scalar fields from the final reference record.

Reference Id
4925
Evidence Id
21515
Core Evidence Id
21515
Source Reference Id
3107
Herb2 Reference Id
HBREF003904
Subject Paper Key
HBIN020984_33888605
Pubmed Id
33888605
Doi
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2087-20.2021
Paper Title
Citric Acid in Drug Formulations Causes Pain by Potentiating Acid-Sensing Ion Channel 1
Paper Abstract
Pain at the injection site is a common complaint of patients receiving therapeutic formulations containing citric acid. Despite the widely acknowledged role of acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) in acid-related perception, the specific ASIC subtype mediating pain caused by subcutaneous acid injection and the mechanism by which citrate affects this process are less clear. Here, male mice subjected to intraplantar acid injection responded by executing a withdrawal reflex, and this response was abolished by ASIC1 but not ASIC2 knockout. Although intraplantar injection of neutral citrate solution did not produce this response, intraplantar injection of acidic citrate solution produced a withdrawal reflex greater than that produced by acidity alone. Consistent with the behavioral data, neutral citrate failed to produce an electrophysiological response in HEK293 cells, which express ASIC1, but acidic citrate produced a whole-cell inward current greater than that produced by acidity alone. Saturating the intracellular solution with citrate had no effect on the potentiating effect of extracellular citrate, suggesting that citrate acted extracellularly to potentiate ASIC1. Moreover, exposure to citrate immediately before acid stimulation failed to potentiate ASIC1 currents, which ruled out the involvement of a metabotropic receptor gated by a citrate metabolite. Finally, removal of calcium ions from the extracellular solution mimicked the potentiating effect of citrate and prevented citrate from further potentiating ASIC1. Our data demonstrate that ASIC1 is necessary for the nociceptive response caused by subcutaneous acid infusion and that neutral citrate, despite not inducing ASIC1 currents or nociceptive behavior on its own, potentiates acid nociception by removing the inhibitory effect of extracellular calcium ions on ASIC1.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Citric acid is a common ingredient used in pharmaceutical formulations. Despite the widespread clinical use of these formulations, it remains unclear how citric acid causes pain when injected into patients. We identified ASIC1 as the key receptor used to detect injection-site pain caused by acid, and we showed that neutral citrate does not stimulate ASIC1; instead, citrate substantially potentiates ASIC1 activation when injected simultaneously with acid. In addition, we demonstrated that citrate potentiates ASIC1 by removing the inhibitory action of calcium on the extracellular side of the receptor. Given that injection-site pain is the primary complaint of patients receiving citrate-containing medical products, our data provide mechanistic insight into a common medical complaint and suggest a means of avoiding injection pain.
Journal
J Neurosci
Publish Year
2021
Experiment Subject
mouse; patient; hek293 cells
Experiment Type
Cell Experiment
Phenotype Related
Paper Title Cn
Paper Title En
Citric Acid in Drug Formulations Causes Pain by Potentiating Acid-Sensing Ion Channel 1
Bilingual Status
semi_complete