1. NAAA-regulated lipid signaling in monocytes controls the induction of hyperalgesic priming in mice
- Author
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Yannick Fotio, Alex Mabou Tagne, Erica Squire, Hye-lim Lee, Connor M. Phillips, Kayla Chang, Faizy Ahmed, Andrew S. Greenberg, S. Armando Villalta, Vanessa M. Scarfone, Gilberto Spadoni, Marco Mor, and Daniele Piomelli
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Abstract Circulating monocytes participate in pain chronification but the molecular events that cause their deployment are unclear. Using a mouse model of hyperalgesic priming (HP), we show that monocytes enable progression to pain chronicity through a mechanism that requires transient activation of the hydrolase, N-acylethanolamine acid amidase (NAAA), and the consequent suppression of NAAA-regulated lipid signaling at peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-α (PPAR-α). Inhibiting NAAA in the 72 hours following administration of a priming stimulus prevented HP. This effect was phenocopied by NAAA deletion and depended on PPAR-α recruitment. Mice lacking NAAA in CD11b+ cells – monocytes, macrophages, and neutrophils – were resistant to HP induction. Conversely, mice overexpressing NAAA or lacking PPAR-α in the same cells were constitutively primed. Depletion of monocytes, but not resident macrophages, generated mice that were refractory to HP. The results identify NAAA-regulated signaling in monocytes as a control node in the induction of HP and, potentially, the transition to pain chronicity.
- Published
- 2024
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