| Literature DB >> 35814225 |
Tameille Valentine1, Lydia Hardowar1, Jasmine Elphick-Ross1, Richard P Hulse1, Mark Paul-Clark1.
Abstract
Chemotherapy causes sensory disturbances in cancer patients that results in neuropathies and pain. As cancer survivorships has dramatically increased over the past 10 years, pain management of these patients is becoming clinically more important. Current analgesic strategies are mainly ineffective and long-term use is associated with severe side effects. The issue being that common analgesic strategies are based on ubiquitous pain mediator pathways, so when applied to clinically diverse neuropathic pain and neurological conditions, are unsuccessful. This is principally due to the lack of understanding of the driving forces that lead to chemotherapy induced neuropathies. It is well documented that chemotherapy causes sensory neurodegeneration through axonal atrophy and intraepidermal fibre degeneration causing alterations in pain perception. Despite the neuropathological alterations associated with chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain being extensively researched, underlying causes remain elusive. Resent evidence from patient and rodent studies have indicated a prominent inflammatory cell component in the peripheral sensory nervous system in effected areas post chemotherapeutic treatment. This is accompanied by modulation of auxiliary cells of the dorsal root ganglia sensory neurons such as activation of satellite glia and capillary dysfunction. The presence of a neuroinflammatory component was supported by transcriptomic analysis of dorsal root ganglia taken from mice treated with common chemotherapy agents. With key inflammatory mediators identified, having potent immunoregulatory effects that directly influences nociception. We aim to evaluate the current understanding of these immune-neuronal interactions across different cancer therapy drug classes. In the belief this may lead to better pain management approaches for cancer survivors.Entities:
Keywords: chemotherapy; inflammation; neuropathy; permeability; vascular
Year: 2022 PMID: 35814225 PMCID: PMC9257211 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.887608
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.988
FIGURE 1Chemotherapy induced vascular inflammation within mouse dorsal root ganglia (A) In rodent models or in human patients administered chemotherapeutic agents display an alternation in the inflammatory profile and vascular permeability of the dorsal root ganglia, factors that accompany the presentation of neuropathic pain behavioural phenotypes following exposure to chemotherapeutic agents such as cisplatin, vincristine or paclitaxel the endothelial cells that form the luminal wall of the capillaries that reside in the dorsal root ganglia have a reduction in tight junctional proteins (ZO1, Occludin, Claudin 5) and accompanying increase in adhesion molecules (ICAM1). This promotes the infiltration of immunological cell types into the dorsal root ganglia and sensory nerves through increased vascular permeability and cell adhesion. (B) Representative images of the increased infiltration of macrophages is displayed following biweekly intraperitoneal injection of Cisplatin (ip 2 mg/kg for 3 weeks) to C57bl6 mice versus vehicle control group (unpublished data). Accumulation of F4/80 positive inflammatory cells (Red) when compared to sham treated rodents, in close apposition to the sensory neurons (green NeuN) in the DRG. In addition, (C) Chemotherapy induced sensory neuroinflammation is represented by the pronounced proinflammatory environment of the peripheral sensory nervous system. To highlight this, here we present the comparison of available rodent dorsal root ganglia transcriptome datasets, obtained from Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) following either cisplatin [GSE125003 (Starobova et al., 2020)] or Paclitaxel [GSE185084 (Lessans et al., 2019)] administration, comparing log 2-fold change of Fragments Per Kilobase Million (FPKM) values from vehicle controls. Our reanalysis of this data demonstrates an increase in proinflammatory mediator expression in particular IL6. (D) Furthermore, utilising FPKM values to summarise the transcriptome following cisplatin treatment from two independent rodent studies [GSE64174 (unpublished) and GSE125003 (Starobova et al., 2020)] highlights an alteration in the dorsal root ganglia transcriptome profile. In both studies797 genes were identified with altered gene expression (FPKM value) greater than 1 log fold change from controls samples). Additionally, using gene enrichment analysis (STRING) post cisplatin treatment the identified 797 genes had a strong association with the promotion of pro-inflammatory process [Gene Ontology Biological Process of less than 0.5 Log p-value with False Discovery Rate (FDR)].