| Literature DB >> 34069553 |
Yi Ye1,2,3, Elizabeth Salvo1,2,3, Marcela Romero-Reyes4, Simon Akerman4, Emi Shimizu5, Yoshifumi Kobayashi5, Benoit Michot6, Jennifer Gibbs6.
Abstract
Orofacial pain is a universal predicament, afflicting millions of individuals worldwide. Research on the molecular mechanisms of orofacial pain has predominately focused on the role of neurons underlying nociception. However, aside from neural mechanisms, non-neuronal cells, such as Schwann cells and satellite ganglion cells in the peripheral nervous system, and microglia and astrocytes in the central nervous system, are important players in both peripheral and central processing of pain in the orofacial region. This review highlights recent molecular and cellular findings of the glia involvement and glia-neuron interactions in four common orofacial pain conditions such as headache, dental pulp injury, temporomandibular joint dysfunction/inflammation, and head and neck cancer. We will discuss the remaining questions and future directions on glial involvement in these four orofacial pain conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Schwann cell; astrocytes; dental pulp injury; head and neck cancer; headache; microglia; satellite ganglia cells; toothache; trigeminal ganglia
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34069553 PMCID: PMC8160907 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22105345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Functional alterations of glial cells, including Schwann cells, SGCs, astrocytes and microglia in response to rofacial tumors, bacterial toxins, dental pulp injury or tissue/nerve injury. Peripheral injury/inflammation induces an increase in glial cell proliferation and hypertrophy, changes in glial activation markers, and the release of pronociceptive mediators that can contribute to neuronal sensitization and pain. TNFα: tumor necrosis factor alpha, IL: interlukin; NO: nitrogen oxide; BDNF: brain derived neurotrophic factor; CCL2: C-C motif chemokine ligand 2; PGE2: prostaglandin E2.
Animal models and model-specific glial responses.
| Pain Conditions | Animal Models | Glial Responses | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schwann Cells | SGCs | Astrocytes | Microglia | ||
|
| Acute/Chronic dural inflammatory soup | ND |
⇧ pERK [ |
⇧ GFAP [ |
⇧ OX42 [ Release of inflammatory mediators [ |
| Cortical Spreading Depression (CSD) | ND |
Maybe involved in initiation and propagation of CSD wave, release of neurotransmitters [ | |||
| Nitroglycerin | ND |
⇧ pERK, S100 [ |
Release of inflammatory mediators [ | ||
|
| CFA injection in the TMJ | ND |
⇧ GFAP [ Release pro-inflammatory mediators [ ⇧ Gap junction function [ ⇧ neuronal activity (Nav1.7 upregulation) [ |
⇧ GFAP [ Release pro-inflammatory mediators [ ⇧ Gap junction function [ Increase neuronal activity (Nav1.7 and pNR1 upregulation) [ |
⇧ Iba1/CD11b [ Release pro-inflammatory mediators [ |
| Carrageenan injection in the TMJ | ND | ND | ND |
⇧ Iba1 [ | |
| Zymosan injection in the TMJ | ND | ND | ND |
⇧ Iba1 [ | |
| Capsaicin injection in the TMJ | ND |
S100B [ ⇧ Gap junction function [ | ND | ND | |
| Formalin injection into the TMJ | ND | ND | ND |
⇧ CD11b [ | |
| Masseter tendon ligation | ND | ND |
⇧ GFAP [ |
⇧ CD11b [ | |
| Tooth movement | ND | ND |
⇧ GFAP [ |
⇧ CD11b [ | |
| Chronic stress | ND |
⇧ GFAP [ Release pro-inflammatory mediators [ |
⇧ GFAP [ Release pro-inflammatory mediators [ ⇧ neuronal activity (pNR1 upregulation) [ |
Not activated [ | |
|
| Acute pulp exposure followed by mustard oil application | ND | ND |
⇧ Glutamine synthase activity [ Inhibition of glutamine supply reduces central sensitization [ |
p38MAPK inhibitors reduce central sensitization [ |
| Pulp exposure followed by CFA application | ND |
⇧ GFAP [ ⇧ Connexin [ |
Not activated [ | ND | |
| Pulp exposure alone | ND | ND |
⇧ GFAP [ ⇧ Glutamine synthase activity [ |
⇧ Iba1 [ | |
|
| Oral cancer cells inoculated into the rat gingiva | ND |
⇧ GFAP [ | Not activated [ |
Not activated [ |
| Oral cancer cells inoculated into the rat tongue | ND | ND | ND |
Activated [ | |
| Breast cancer cells inoculated into the rat vibrissa pad | ND |
Not activated [ |
⇧ GFAP [ |
⇧ Iba1 [ | |
| Oral cancer cells inoculated into themouse sciatic nerve to mimic PNI |
Myelin abnormalities [ | ND | ND | ND | |
| Schwann cell supernatant injection |
⇧ Migration, proliferation, cell size in the presence of oral cancer cells [ | ND | ND | ND | |
ND: No Data. Arrows: upregulation.
Clinical trials using glial modulators.
| Drug Name | Target | Indication | Efficacy | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minocycline | Microglia inhibitor | Third molar surgery | Yes | Gelesko et al., 2011 [ |
| Lumbar discectomy | No | Martinez et al., 2013 [ | ||
| Diabetic peripheral neuropathy | No | Syngle et al., 2014 [ | ||
| Carpal tunnel and trigger finger release | No; longer pain in a patient subgroup | Curtin et al., 2017 [ | ||
| Lumbar radiculopathy | Yes | Vanelderen et al., 2015 [ | ||
| Unilateral sciatica | No | Sumracki et al., 2012 [ | ||
| Propentofylline | Microglia and astrocytes modulator | Post-herpetic neuralgia | No | Landry et al., 2012 [ |
| Ibudilast | cAMP phosphodiesterase inhibitor | Chronic migraine | No | Kwok et al., 2016 [ |
| Medication overuse headache | No | Loggia et al., 2015 [ | ||
| Tonabersat | Gap-junction modulator | Migraine prophylaxis | Yes, in migraine patients with aura | Hauge et al., 2009 [ |
| Naltrexone | Toll-like receptor 4 antagonist | Fibromyalgia | Yes | Younger et al., 2009, 2013 [ |
| Amitriptyline | P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitor | Lumbar radiculopathy | Yes | Vanelderen et al., 2015 [ |
| Losmapimod | P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitor | Traumatic peripheral nerve injury | No | Ostenfeld et al., 2013 [ |
| Lumbosacral radiculopathies | No | Ostenfeld et al., 2015 [ | ||
| Dilmapimod | P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitor | Mixed neuropathic pain | Yes | Anand et al., 2011 [ |