4.8 Article

Neuropathic pain caused by miswiring and abnormal end organ targeting

Journal

NATURE
Volume 606, Issue 7912, Pages 137-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04777-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ERC Advanced Investigator grant [294293]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB1158, 371923335]
  3. Generalitat Valenciana [CIDEGENT/2020/052]
  4. Medical Faculty Heidelberg
  5. Excellence Cluster Cell Networks
  6. state of Baden-Wurttemberg
  7. German Research Foundation (DFG) [INST 35/1314-1 FUGG, INST 35/1134-1 FUGG]
  8. European Research Council (ERC) [294293] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Nerve injury leads to chronic neuropathic pain characterized by allodynia and loss of sensation. The study reveals that reinnervation-induced neuropathic pain involves the sprouting of pain-sensing fibers into denervated areas, abnormal terminal connectivity, and malfunction of nociceptors. In contrast, touch-sensing fibers do not reinnervate, leading to aberrant innervation of tactile end organs.
Nerve injury leads to chronic pain and exaggerated sensitivity to gentle touch (allodynia) as well as a loss of sensation in the areas in which injured and non-injured nerves come together(1-3). The mechanisms that disambiguate these mixed and paradoxical symptoms are unknown. Here we longitudinally and non-invasively imaged genetically labelled populations of fibres that sense noxious stimuli (nociceptors) and gentle touch (low-threshold afferents) peripherally in the skin for longerthan 10 months after nerve injury, while simultaneously tracking pain-related behaviour in the same mice. Fully denervated areas of skin initially lost sensation, gradually recovered normal sensitivity and developed marked allodynia and aversion to gentle touch several months after injury. This reinnervation-induced neuropathic pain involved nociceptors that sprouted into denervated territories precisely reproducing the initial pattern of innervation, were guided by blood vessels and showed irregularterminal connectivity in the skin and lowered activation thresholds mimicking low-threshold afferents. By contrast, low-threshold afferents-which normally mediate touch sensation as well as allodynia in intact nerve territories after injury(4-7)-did not reinnervate, leading to an aberrant innervation oftactile end organs such as Meissner corpuscles with nociceptors alone. Genetic ablation of nociceptors fully abrogated reinnervation allodynia. Our resultsthus reveal the emergence of a form of chronic neuropathic pain that is driven by structural plasticity, abnormal terminal connectivity and malfunction of nociceptors during reinnervation, and provide a mechanistic framework for the paradoxical sensory manifestationsthat are observed clinically and can impose a heavy burden on patients.

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