Cell Reports
Volume 22, Issue 5, 30 January 2018, Pages 1301-1312
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Article
Mechanistic Differences in Neuropathic Pain Modalities Revealed by Correlating Behavior with Global Expression Profiling

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2018.01.006Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Peripheral processes leading to neuropathic cold and tactile allodynia differ

  • TrpV1-lineage neurons participate in cold, but not tactile, allodynia

  • Immune system activation contributes to tactile allodynia but minimally to cold allodynia

Summary

Chronic neuropathic pain is a major morbidity of neural injury, yet its mechanisms are incompletely understood. Hypersensitivity to previously non-noxious stimuli (allodynia) is a common symptom. Here, we demonstrate that the onset of cold hypersensitivity precedes tactile allodynia in a model of partial nerve injury, and this temporal divergence was associated with major differences in global gene expression in innervating dorsal root ganglia. Transcripts whose expression change correlates with the onset of cold allodynia were nociceptor related, whereas those correlating with tactile hypersensitivity were immune cell centric. Ablation of TrpV1 lineage nociceptors resulted in mice that did not acquire cold allodynia but developed normal tactile hypersensitivity, whereas depletion of macrophages or T cells reduced neuropathic tactile allodynia but not cold hypersensitivity. We conclude that neuropathic pain incorporates reactive processes of sensory neurons and immune cells, each leading to distinct forms of hypersensitivity, potentially allowing drug development targeted to each pain type.

Keywords

neuropathic pain
macrophages
T cells
immune system
TrpV1
tactile allodynia
cold allodynia
gene expression
transcript profiling
WCGNA

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