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Spinal microglia are required for long-term maintenance of neuropathic pain

Authors :
Louis-Etienne Lorenzo
Xiang Qun Shi
Ji Zhang
Yves De Koninck
Yichen Wu
Mu Yang
Jimena Perez-Sanchez
Robert P. Bonin
Stefania Echeverry
Hao Huang
Source :
Pain. 158:1792-1801
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2017.

Abstract

While spinal microglia play a role in early stages of neuropathic pain etiology, whether they are useful targets to reverse chronic pain at late stages remains unknown. Here, we show that microglia activation in the spinal cord persists for >3 months following nerve injury in rodents, beyond involvement of proinflammatory cytokine and chemokine signalling. In this chronic phase, selective depletion of spinal microglia in male rats with the targeted immunotoxin Mac1-saporin and blockade of brain-derived neurotrophic factor-TrkB signalling with intrathecal TrkB Fc chimera, but not cytokine inhibition, almost completely reversed pain hypersensitivity. By contrast, local spinal administration of Mac1-saporin did not affect nociceptive withdrawal threshold in control animals nor did it affect the strength of afferent-evoked synaptic activity in the spinal dorsal horn in normal conditions. These findings show that the long-term, chronic phase of nerve injury-induced pain hypersensitivity is maintained by microglia-neuron interactions. The findings also effectively separate the central signalling pathways underlying the maintenance phase of the pathology from the early and peripheral inflammatory reactions to injury, pointing to different targets for the treatment of acute vs chronic injury-induced pain.

Details

ISSN :
18726623 and 03043959
Volume :
158
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4a4e7a4ab2f6b014ccdd9ce4a54a32b4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000982