Morphine hyperalgesia gated through microglia-mediated disruption of neuronal Cl− homeostasis
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2013
Abstract:
A major unresolved issue in treating pain is the paradoxical hyperalgesia produced by the gold-standard analgesic morphine and other opiates. We found that hyperalgesia-inducing treatment with morphine resulted in downregulation of the K+-Cl− co-transporter KCC2, impairing Cl− homeostasis in rat spinal lamina l neurons. Restoring the anion equilibrium potential reversed the morphine-induced hyperalgesia without affecting tolerance. The hyperalgesia was also reversed by ablating spinal microglia. Morphine hyperalgesia, but not tolerance, required μ opioid receptor–dependent expression of P2X4 receptors (P2X4Rs) in microglia and μ-independent gating of the release of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) by P2X4Rs. Blocking BDNF-TrkB signaling preserved Cl− homeostasis and reversed the hyperalgesia. Gene-targeted mice in which Bdnf was deleted from microglia did not develop hyperalgesia to morphine. However, neither morphine antinociception nor tolerance was affected in these mice. Our findings dissociate morphine-induced hyperalgesia from tolerance and suggest the microglia-to-neuron P2X4-BDNF-KCC2 pathway as a therapeutic target for preventing hyperalgesia without affecting morphine analgesia.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Midollo spinale; morfina; iperalgesia; sinapsi GABAergiche; KCC2; microglia; BDNF
Elenco autori:
Francesco Ferrini;Tuan Trang;Theresa-Alexandra M Mattioli;Sophie Laffray;Thomas Del'Guidice;Louis-Etienne Lorenzo;Annie Castonguay;Nicolas Doyon;Wenbo Zhang;Antoine G Godin;Daniela Mohr;Simon Beggs;Karen Vandal;Jean-Martin Beaulieu;Catherine M Cahill;Michael W Salter;Yves De Koninck
Link alla scheda completa:
Link al Full Text:
Pubblicato in: