4.7 Article

Involvement of Spinal IL-6 Trans-Signaling in the Induction of Hyperexcitability of Deep Dorsal Horn Neurons by Spinal Tumor Necrosis Factor-Alpha

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 36, Issue 38, Pages 9782-9791

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4159-15.2016

Keywords

central sensitization; cytokine; electrophysiology; inflammation; microglia; soluble IL-6 receptor

Categories

Funding

  1. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (BMBF program Neuroimpa)
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)

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During peripheral inflammation, both spinal TNF-alpha and IL-6 are released within the spinal cord and support the generation of inflammation-evoked spinal hyperexcitability. However, whether spinal TNF-alpha and IL-6 act independently in parallel or in a functionally dependent manner has not been investigated. In extracellular recordings from mechanonociceptive deep dorsal horn neurons of normal rats in vivo, we found that spinal application of TNF-alpha increased spinal neuronal responses to mechanical stimulation of knee and ankle joints. This effect was significantly attenuated by either sgp130, which blocks IL-6 trans-signaling mediated by IL-6 and its soluble receptor IL-6R (sIL-6R); by an antibody to the IL-6 receptor; or by minocycline, which inhibits the microglia. IL-6 was localized in neurons of the spinal cord and, upon peripheral noxious stimulation in the presence of spinal TNF-alpha, IL-6 was released spinally. Furthermore, TNF-alpha recruited microglial cells to provide sIL-6R, which can form complexes with IL-6. Spinal application of IL-6 plus sIL-6R, but not of IL-6 alone, enhanced spinal hyperexcitability similar to TNF-alpha and the inhibition of TNF-alpha-induced hyperexcitability by minocycline was overcome by coadministration of sIL-6R, showing that sIL-6R is required. Neither minocycline nor the TNF-alpha-neutralizing compound etanercept inhibited the induction of hyperexcitability by IL-6 plus sIL-6R. Together, these data show that the induction of hyperexcitability of nociceptive deep dorsal horn neurons by TNF-alpha largely depends on the formation of IL-6/sIL-6R complexes that are downstream of TNF-alpha and requires the interactions of neurons and microglia orchestrated by TNF-alpha.

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