Abstract
CCL2 chemokine and its receptor CCR2 may contribute to neuropathic pain development. We tested the hypothesis that injury to peripheral nerves triggers CCL2 release from afferents in the dorsal horn spinal cord (DHSC), leading to pronociceptive effects, involving the production of pro inflammatory factors, in particular. Consistent with the release of CCL2 from primary afferents, electron microscopy showed the CCL2 immunoreactivity in glomerular boutons and secretory vesicles in the DHSC of naive rats. Through the ex vivo superfusion of DHSC slices, we demonstrated that the rate of CCL2 secretion was much lower in neonatal capsaicin-treated rats than in controls. Thus, much of the CCL2 released in the DHSC originates from nociceptive fibers bearing TRPV1 (transient receptor potential vanilloid 1).Incontrast,high levelsofCCL2 released from the DHSC were observedinneuropathic pain animal model inducedbychronic constriction of the sciatic nerve (SN-CCI). The upregulated expression of pro inflammatory markers and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) 1/2 pathway activation (ERK1/2 phosphorylation) in the DHSC of SN-CCI animals were reversed by intrathecal administration of the CCR2 antagonist INCB3344 (N-[2-[[(3S,4S)-1-E4-(1,3-benzodioxol-5-yl)-4-hydroxycyclohexyl]-4-ethoxy-3-pyrrolidinyl]amino]-2-oxoethyl]-3-(trifluoromethyl)benzamide). These pathological pain-associated changes in the DHSC were mimicked by the intrathecal injection of exogenous CCL2 in naive rats and were prevented by the administration of INCB3344 or ERK inhibitor (PD98059). Finally, mechanical allodynia, which was fully developed 2 weeks after SN-CCI in rats, was attenuated by the intrathecal injection of INCB3344. Our data demonstrate that CCL2 has the typical characteristics of a neuronal mediator involved in nociceptive signal processing and that antagonists of its receptor are promising agents from treating neuropathic pain. © 2011 the Authors.
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CITATION STYLE
van Steenwinckel, J., Goazigo, A. R. L., Pommier, B., Mauborgne, A., Dansereau, M. A., Kitabgi, P., … Parsadaniantz, S. M. (2011). CCL2 released from neuronal synaptic vesicles in the spinal cord is a major mediator of local inflammation and pain after peripheral nerve injury. Journal of Neuroscience, 31(15), 5865–5875. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5986-10.2011
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