4.7 Article

Sex Differences in Neuropathy: The Paradigmatic Case of MetFormin

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232314503

Keywords

neuropathic pain; allodynia; metformin; sex differences; macrophages; autophagy; AMPK; TNF alpha; leptin; neurofilaments

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health-Young Researchers
  2. [GR-2011-02346912]

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This study investigates the role of metformin in gender differences in pain processing and discovers sex-dependent differences in immune and inflammatory responses, potentially explaining the disparity in recovery from Neuropathic Pain between male and female animals.
As a widely prescribed anti-diabetic drug, metformin has been receiving novel attention for its analgesic potential. In the study of the complex etiology of neuropathic pain (NeP), male and female individuals exhibit quite different responses characterized by higher pain sensitivity and greater NeP incidence in women. This gender gap in our knowledge of sex differences in pain processing strongly limits the sex-oriented treatment of patients suffering from NeP. Besides, the current investigation of the analgesic potential of metformin has not addressed the gender gap problem. Hence, this study focuses on metformin and sex-dependent analgesia in a murine model of NeP induced by chronic constriction injury of the sciatic nerve. We investigated sexual dimorphism in signaling pathways involved by 7 days of metformin administration, such as changes in AMP-activated protein kinase and the positive regulation of autophagy machinery, discovering that metformin affected in a sexually dimorphic manner the immunological and inflammatory response to nerve lesion. These effects were complemented by morphological and adaptive changes occurring after peripheral nerve injury. Altogether these data can contribute to explaining a number of potential mechanisms responsible for the complete recovery from NeP found in male mice, as opposed to the failure of long-lasting recovery in female animals.

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