| Literature DB >> 25147499 |
Abstract
The development of neuropathic pain in response to peripheral nerve lesion for a large part depends on microglia located at the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. Thus the injured nerve initiates a response of microglia, which represents the start of a cascade of events that leads to neuropathic pain development. For long it remained obscure how a nerve injury in the periphery would initiate a microglia response in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. Recently, two chemokines have been suggested as potential factors that mediate the communication between injured neurons and microglia namely CCL2 and CCL21. This assumption is based on the following findings. Both chemokines are not found in healthy neurons, but are expressed in response to neuronal injury. In injured dorsal root ganglion cells CCL2 and CCL21 are expressed in vesicles in the soma and transported through the axons of the dorsal root into the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. Finally, microglia in vitro are known to respond to CCL2 and CCL21. Whereas the microglial chemokine receptor involved in CCL21-induced neuropathic pain is not yet defined the situation concerning the receptors for CCL2 in microglia in vivo is even less clear. Recent results obtained in transgenic animals clearly show that microglia in vivo do not express CCR2 but that peripheral myeloid cells and neurons do. This suggests that CCL2 expressed by injured dorsal root neurons does not act as neuron-microglia signal in contrast to CCL21. Instead, CCL2 in the injured dorsal root ganglia (DRG) may act as autocrine or paracrine signal and may stimulate first or second order neurons in the pain cascade and/or attract CCR2-expressing peripheral monocytes/macrophages to the spinal cord.Entities:
Keywords: DRG neurons; LDV vesicles; chemokines; microglia reaction; neuron-microglia signaling; neuropathic pain; regulated release pathway
Year: 2014 PMID: 25147499 PMCID: PMC4124792 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2014.00210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1The different roles of CCL2 and CCL21 in the development of neuropathic pain. Both chemokines are induced in DRG neurons in response to nerve injury. CCL2 in the injured DRG may act as local autocrine signal (neuron-neuron signal) and potentially paracrine in the spinal cord where neuronally released CCL2 may stimulate second order neurons in the pain cascade and/or attract CCR2-expressing peripheral monocytes/macrophages. Since there are conflicting data about the transport of CCL2 from the DRG into the spinal cord, alternatively CCL2 from astrocytes might also activate these target cells. Neuronal CCL21 is transported from the DRG into the spinal cord and contributes to neuron-microglia signaling. CCL21 is the crucial trigger to up-regulate P2X4 receptors in spinal cord microglia which is a vital step in the cascade that leads to neuropathic pain. Although the receptor for CCL21 in spinal cord microglia is an unsolved issue, this chemokine most likely acts as neuron-microglia signal only, since effects of CCL21 in other cells of the spinal cord have yet not been described.