Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
914035 | PAIN® | 2010 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Chronic pain associated with inflammation is a major clinical problem, but the underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. Recently, we reported that GRK2+/â mice with a â¼50% reduction of GRK2 develop prolonged hyperalgesia following a single intraplantar injection of the pro-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-1β (IL-1β). Here we show that spinal microglia/macrophage GRK2 is reduced during chronic inflammation-induced hyperalgesia. Next, we applied CRE-Lox technology to create mice with low GRK2 in microglia/macrophages/granulocytes (LysM-GRK2f/+), or sensory neurons or astrocytes. Only mice deficient in microglial/macrophage/granulocyte GRK2 display prolonged IL-1β-induced hyperalgesia that lasts up to 8 days. Two days after intraplantar IL-1β, increased microglial/macrophage activity occurs in the lumbar but not thoracic spinal cord of GRK2-deficient mice. Intrathecal pre-treatment with minocycline, an inhibitor of microglia/macrophage activation, accelerates resolution of hyperalgesia independent of genotype and prevents transition to chronic hyperalgesia in GRK2+/â mice. Ongoing hyperalgesia in GRK2+/â mice is reversed by minocycline administration at days 1 and 2 after IL-1β injection. Similarly, IL-1β-induced hyperalgesia in LysM-GRK2f/+ mice is attenuated by intrathecal administration of anti-CX3CR1 to abrogate fractalkine signaling, the p38 inhibitor SB239063 and the IL-1 antagonist IL-1ra. These data establish that chronic inflammatory hyperalgesia is associated with reduced GRK2 in microglia/macrophages and that low GRK2 in these cells is sufficient to markedly prolong hyperalgesia after a single intraplantar injection of IL-1β. Ongoing hyperalgesia is maintained by spinal microglial/macrophage activity, fractalkine signaling, p38 activation and IL-1 signaling. We propose that chronic inflammation decreases spinal microglial/macrophage GRK2, which prevents silencing of microglia/macrophage activity and thereby contributes to prolonged hyperalgesia.
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Authors
Hanneke L.D.M. Willemen, Niels Eijkelkamp, Huijing Wang, Robert Dantzer, Gerald W. II, Keith W. Kelley, Cobi J. Heijnen, Annemieke Kavelaars,