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      Immune drivers of physiological and pathological pain

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          Abstract

          Immune cells instruct the development and persistence of adaptive and maladaptive pain states by modifying neural activity in the end organs, nerves, dorsal root ganglia, spinal cord, and brain, therefore opening the neuroimmune axis as a target to treat pain.

          Abstract

          Physiological pain serves as a warning of exposure to danger and prompts us to withdraw from noxious stimuli to prevent tissue damage. Pain can also alert us of an infection or organ dysfunction and aids in locating such malfunction. However, there are instances where pain is purely pathological, such as unresolved pain following an inflammation or injury to the nervous system, and this can be debilitating and persistent. We now appreciate that immune cells are integral to both physiological and pathological pain, and that pain, in consequence, is not strictly a neuronal phenomenon. Here, we discuss recent findings on how immune cells in the skin, nerve, dorsal root ganglia, and spinal cord interact with somatosensory neurons to mediate pain. We also discuss how both innate and adaptive immune cells, by releasing various ligands and mediators, contribute to the initiation, modulation, persistence, or resolution of various modalities of pain. Finally, we propose that the neuroimmune axis is an attractive target for pain treatment, but the challenges in objectively quantifying pain preclinically, variable sex differences in pain presentation, as well as adverse outcomes associated with immune system modulation, all need to be considered in the development of immunotherapies against pain.

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          Most cited references120

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          Diversity, Mechanisms, and Significance of Macrophage Plasticity

          Macrophages are a diverse set of cells present in all body compartments. This diversity is imprinted by their ontogenetic origin (embryonal versus adult bone marrow–derived cells); the organ context; by their activation or deactivation by various signals in the contexts of microbial invasion, tissue damage, and metabolic derangement; and by polarization of adaptive T cell responses. Classic adaptive responses of macrophages include tolerance, priming, and a wide spectrum of activation states, including M1, M2, or M2-like. Moreover, macrophages can retain long-term imprinting of microbial encounters (trained innate immunity). Single-cell analysis of mononuclear phagocytes in health and disease has added a new dimension to our understanding of the diversity of macrophage differentiation and activation. Epigenetic landscapes, transcription factors, and microRNA networks underlie the adaptability of macrophages to different environmental cues. Macrophage plasticity, an essential component of chronic inflammation, and its involvement in diverse human diseases, most notably cancer, is discussed here as a paradigm.
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            Different immune cells mediate mechanical pain hypersensitivity in male and female mice.

            A large and rapidly increasing body of evidence indicates that microglia-to-neuron signaling is essential for chronic pain hypersensitivity. Using multiple approaches, we found that microglia are not required for mechanical pain hypersensitivity in female mice; female mice achieved similar levels of pain hypersensitivity using adaptive immune cells, likely T lymphocytes. This sexual dimorphism suggests that male mice cannot be used as proxies for females in pain research.
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              Spared nerve injury: an animal model of persistent peripheral neuropathic pain.

              Peripheral neuropathic pain is produced by multiple etiological factors that initiate a number of diverse mechanisms operating at different sites and at different times and expressed both within, and across different disease states. Unraveling the mechanisms involved requires laboratory animal models that replicate as far as possible, the different pathophysiological changes present in patients. It is unlikely that a single animal model will include the full range of neuropathic pain mechanisms. A feature of several animal models of peripheral neuropathic pain is partial denervation. In the most frequently used models a mixture of intact and injured fibers is created by loose ligation of either the whole (Bennett GJ, Xie YK. A peripheral mononeuropathy in rat that produces disorders of pain sensation like those seen in man. Pain 1988;33:87-107) or a tight ligation of a part (Seltzer Z, Dubner R, Shir Y. A novel behavioral model of neuropathic pain disorders produced in rats by partial sciatic nerve injury. Pain 1990;43:205-218) of a large peripheral nerve, or a tight ligation of an entire spinal segmental nerve (Kim SH, Chung JM. An experimental model for peripheral neuropathy produced by segmental spinal nerve ligation in the rat. Pain 1992;50:355-363). We have developed a variant of partial denervation, the spared nerve injury model. This involves a lesion of two of the three terminal branches of the sciatic nerve (tibial and common peroneal nerves) leaving the remaining sural nerve intact. The spared nerve injury model differs from the Chung spinal segmental nerve, the Bennett chronic constriction injury and the Seltzer partial sciatic nerve injury models in that the co-mingling of distal intact axons with degenerating axons is restricted, and it permits behavioral testing of the non-injured skin territories adjacent to the denervated areas. The spared nerve injury model results in early ( 6 months), robust (all animals are responders) behavioral modifications. The mechanical (von Frey and pinprick) sensitivity and thermal (hot and cold) responsiveness is increased in the ipsilateral sural and to a lesser extent saphenous territories, without any change in heat thermal thresholds. Crush injury of the tibial and common peroneal nerves produce similar early changes, which return, however to baseline at 7-9 weeks. The spared nerve injury model may provide, therefore, an additional resource for unraveling the mechanisms responsible for the production of neuropathic pain.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ConceptualizationRole: VisualizationRole: Writing - original draftRole: Writing - review & editing
                Role: ConceptualizationRole: VisualizationRole: Writing - original draftRole: Writing - review & editing
                Role: ConceptualizationRole: SupervisionRole: Writing - review & editing
                Journal
                J Exp Med
                J Exp Med
                jem
                The Journal of Experimental Medicine
                Rockefeller University Press
                0022-1007
                1540-9538
                06 May 2024
                12 April 2024
                12 April 2024
                : 221
                : 5
                : e20221687
                Affiliations
                [1 ]F.M. Kirby Neurobiology Center, Boston Children’s Hospital ( https://ror.org/00dvg7y05) , Boston, MA, USA
                [2 ]Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School ( https://ror.org/03wevmz92) , Boston, MA, USA
                Author notes
                Correspondence to Clifford J. Woolf: clifford.woolf@ 123456childrens.harvard.edu
                [*]

                A. Jain and S. Hakim contributed equally to this paper.

                Disclosures: C.J. Woolf reported personal fees from Lundbeck Pharma and GSK outside the submitted work. No other disclosures were reported.

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9602-4987
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0091-1221
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6636-3897
                Article
                jem.20221687
                10.1084/jem.20221687
                11010323
                38607420
                83391b60-4cf2-4070-b734-ca1812d53e77
                © 2024 Jain et al.

                This article is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International, as described at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 19 May 2023
                : 25 September 2023
                : 02 April 2024
                Categories
                Perspective
                Innate Immunity and Inflammation
                Neuroscience
                Neuroinflammation

                Medicine
                Medicine

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