4.8 Article

IFN-γ receptor signaling mediates spinal microglia activation driving neuropathic pain

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0810420106

Keywords

allodynia; cytokine; glia; Lyn tyrosine kinase; purinergic receptor

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

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Neuropathic pain, a highly debilitating pain condition that commonly occurs after nerve damage, is a reflection of the aberrant excitability of dorsal horn neurons. This pathologically altered neurotransmission requires a communication with spinal microglia activated by nerve injury. However, how normal resting microglia become activated remains unknown. Here we show that in naive animals spinal microglia express a receptor for the cytokine IFN-gamma (IFN-gamma R) in a cell-type-specific manner and that stimulating this receptor converts microglia into activated cells and produces a long-lasting pain hypersensitivity evoked by innocuous stimuli (tactile allodynia, a hallmark symptom of neuropathic pain). Conversely, ablating IFN-gamma R severely impairs nerve injury-evoked microglia activation and tactile allodynia without affecting microglia in the contralateral dorsal horn or basal pain sensitivity. We also find that IFN-gamma-stimulated spinal microglia show up-regulation of Lyn tyrosine kinase and purinergic P2X(4) receptor, crucial events for neuropathic pain, and genetic approaches provide evidence linking these events to IFN-gamma R-dependent microglial and behavioral alterations. These results suggest that IFN-gamma R is a key element in the molecular machinery through which resting spinal microglia transform into an activated state that drives neuropathic pain.

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