A review of dorsal root ganglia and primary sensory neuron plasticity mediating inflammatory and chronic neuropathic pain

Q2 Medicine Neurobiology of Pain Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.ynpai.2024.100151
Kyeongran Jang, Sandra M. Garraway
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Abstract

Pain is a sensory state resulting from complex integration of peripheral nociceptive inputs and central processing. Pain consists of adaptive pain that is acute and beneficial for healing and maladaptive pain that is often persistent and pathological. Pain is indeed heterogeneous, and can be expressed as nociceptive, inflammatory, or neuropathic in nature. Neuropathic pain is an example of maladaptive pain that occurs after spinal cord injury (SCI), which triggers a wide range of neural plasticity. The nociceptive processing that underlies pain hypersensitivity is well-studied in the spinal cord. However, recent investigations show maladaptive plasticity that leads to pain, including neuropathic pain after SCI, also exists at peripheral sites, such as the dorsal root ganglia (DRG), which contains the cell bodies of sensory neurons. This review discusses the important role DRGs play in nociceptive processing that underlies inflammatory and neuropathic pain. Specifically, it highlights nociceptor hyperexcitability as critical to increased pain states. Furthermore, it reviews prior literature on glutamate and glutamate receptors, voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSC), and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) signaling in the DRG as important contributors to inflammatory and neuropathic pain. We previously reviewed BDNF’s role as a bidirectional neuromodulator of spinal plasticity. Here, we shift focus to the periphery and discuss BDNF-TrkB expression on nociceptors, non-nociceptor sensory neurons, and non-neuronal cells in the periphery as a potential contributor to induction and persistence of pain after SCI. Overall, this review presents a comprehensive evaluation of large bodies of work that individually focus on pain, DRG, BDNF, and SCI, to understand their interaction in nociceptive processing.

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背根神经节和初级感觉神经元可塑性介导炎症性和慢性神经性疼痛综述
疼痛是一种感觉状态,是外周痛觉输入和中枢处理复杂整合的结果。疼痛包括急性和有益于愈合的适应性疼痛,以及通常是持续性和病理性的适应性疼痛。疼痛其实是多种多样的,在本质上可以表现为痛觉性、炎症性或神经病理性疼痛。神经病理性疼痛是脊髓损伤(SCI)后出现的适应不良性疼痛的一个例子,它引发了广泛的神经可塑性。对脊髓中痛觉过敏的痛觉处理进行了深入研究。然而,最近的研究表明,导致疼痛(包括 SCI 后的神经性疼痛)的不适应可塑性也存在于外周部位,如包含感觉神经元细胞体的背根神经节(DRG)。本综述讨论了 DRG 在痛觉处理过程中扮演的重要角色,它是炎症性疼痛和神经性疼痛的基础。具体而言,它强调了痛觉感受器过度兴奋对疼痛状态加剧的关键作用。此外,它还回顾了之前有关谷氨酸和谷氨酸受体、电压门控钠通道(VGSC)和脑源性神经营养因子(BDNF)信号传导的文献,这些都是导致炎症性和神经性疼痛的重要因素。我们之前回顾了 BDNF 作为脊柱可塑性双向神经调节因子的作用。在此,我们将重点转移到外周,讨论 BDNF-TrkB 在痛觉感受器、非痛觉感受器感觉神经元和外周非神经元细胞上的表达,这是 SCI 后诱发和持续疼痛的潜在因素。总之,本综述全面评估了单独关注疼痛、DRG、BDNF 和 SCI 的大量研究工作,以了解它们在痛觉处理过程中的相互作用。
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来源期刊
Neurobiology of Pain
Neurobiology of Pain Medicine-Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
审稿时长
54 days
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