4.5 Article

Longitudinal intravital imaging nerve degeneration and sprouting in the toes of spared nerve injured mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY
Volume 529, Issue 12, Pages 3247-3264

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cne.25162

Keywords

cutaneous nerve fibers; intravital imaging; MrgD-GFP; Nav1.8-tdTomato; neuropathic pain; Thy1-GFP

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST-109-2321-B-002-028]

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Neuropathic pain is caused by damage to the somatosensory nervous system, and the study found that nerve degeneration is related to the initiation of pain while nerve sprouting is related to the maintenance of pain.
Neuropathic pain is pain caused by damage to the somatosensory nervous system. Both degenerating injured nerves and neighboring sprouting nerves can contribute to neuropathic pain. However, the mesoscale changes in cutaneous nerve fibers over time after the loss of the parent nerve has not been investigated in detail. In this study, we followed the changes in nerve fibers longitudinally in the toe tips of mice that had undergone spared nerve injury (SNI). Nav1.8-tdTomato, Thy1-GFP and MrgD-GFP mice were used to observe the small and large cutaneous nerve fibers. We found that peripheral nerve plexuses degenerated within 3 days of nerve injury, and free nerve endings in the epidermis degenerated within 2 days. The timing of degeneration paralleled the initiation of mechanical hypersensitivity. We also found that some of the Nav1.8-positive nerve plexuses and free nerve endings in the fifth toe survived, and sprouting occurred mostly from 7 to 28 days. The timing of the sprouting of nerve fibers in the fifth toe paralleled the maintenance phase of mechanical hypersensitivity. Our results support the hypotheses that both injured and intact nerve fibers participate in neuropathic pain, and that, specifically, nerve degeneration is related to the initiation of evoked pain and nerve sprouting is related to the maintenance of evoked pain.

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