Spinal cord injury (SCI) often results in intractable chronic central pain syndromes. Recently chemokines such as CCL2 were identified as possible key integrators of neuropathic pain and inflammation after peripheral nerve lesion. The focus of the current study was the investigation of time-dependent CCL2 and CCR2 expression in relation to central neuropathic pain development after spinal cord impact lesions of 100, 150, or 200 kdyn force on spinal cord level T9 in adult rats. Below-level pain was monitored with weekly sensory testing for 42 days after SCI. In parallel expression of CCL2/CCR2 on cervical, thoracic, and lumbar levels was investigated by real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and immunohistochemistry early (7 days [7d]), intermediate (15d), and late (42d) after lesion. Cellular source and anatomical pain related expression was determined by double-immunohistochemistry. Force-defined SCI led to acute mechanical hypersensitivity in all lesion groups, and to persistent below-level pain in severely injured animals. While in the early post-operative time course, CCL2 and CCR2 were expressed in astroglia and granulocytes only on level T9; there was additional astroglial CCL2 expression in dorsal columns and dorsal horns above and below T9 of severely injured animals 42d after lesion. In dorsal horns (level L3-L5) of animals exhibiting chronic below-level pain CCL2 was co-expressed with transmitters and receptors that are involved in nociceptive processing like calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), Substance-P, vanilloid-receptor-1, and its activated phosphorylated form. These data demonstrate lesion grade dependence of below-level pain development and suggest chemokines as potential candidates for integrating inflammation and central neuropathic pain after SCI.
Inflammatory cascades induced by spinal cord injuries (SCI) are localized in the white matter, a recognized neural stem- and progenitor-cell (NSPC) niche of the adult spinal cord. Chemokines, as integrators of these processes, might also be important determinants of this NSPC niche. CCL3/CCR1, CCL2/CCR2, and SDF-1alpha/CXCR4 were analyzed in the ventrolateral white matter after force defined thoracic SCI: Immunoreactivity (IR) density levels were measured 2 d, 7 d, 14 d, and 42 d on cervical (C 5), thoracic (T 5), and lumbar (L 5) levels. On day post operation (DPO) 42, chemokine inductions were further evaluated by real-time RT-PCR and Western blot analyses. Cellular phenotypes were confirmed by double labeling with markers for major cell types and NSPCs (nestin, Musashi-1, NG2, 3CB2, BLBP). Mitotic profiles were investigated in parallel by BrdU labeling. After lesion, chemokines were induced in the ventrolateral white matter on IR-, mRNA-, and protein-level. IR was generally more pronounced after severe lesions, with soaring increases of CCL2/CCR2 and continuous elevations of CCL3/CCR1. SDF-1alpha and CXCR4 IR induction was focused on thoracic levels. Chemokines/-receptors were co-expressed with astroglial, oligodendroglial markers, nestin, 3CB2 and BLBP by cells morphologically resembling radial glia on DPO 7 to DPO 42, and NG2 or Musashi-1 on DPO 2 and 7. In the white matter BrdU positive cells were significantly elevated after lesion compared with sham controls on all investigated time points peaking in the early time course on thoracic level: Here, chemokines were co-expressed by subsets of BrdU-labeled cells. These findings suggest an important role of chemokines/-receptors in the subpial white matter NSPC niche after SCI.
Due to their involvement in neuro-modulatory processes, the endogenous cannabinoid system and chemokine network, which were shown to interact which each other, are potential key elements in the cascades underlying central neuropathic pain development after spinal cord injury (SCI). Expression profiles of cannabinoid receptor type-1 (CB(1)), and of the chemokines chemokine ligand 2 (C-C motif ) (CCL2), chemokine ligand 3 (C-C motif ) (CCL3), plus their main receptors CCR2 and CCR1, were investigated in brain regions related to pain, emotion, learning, and memory in a rat SCI paradigm of post-traumatic neuropathic pain. Immunoreactivity (IR) was investigated 7 days and 42 days after sham operation, and moderate (100-kdyn), and severe (200-kdyn) thoracic spinal cord contusion lesions. Hippocampal (HC) subregions, amygdaloid complex, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), periaqueductal gray (PAG), and thalamic nuclei were analyzed. Seven days after lesioning, CB(1) IR was induced in thalamic nuclei and HC subregions (CA3 and dentate gyrus), and downregulated in amygdaloid nuclei, ACC, and PAG. On day 42, CB(1) IR remained elevated in the HC and thalamic areas, and was induced in ACC after 100-kdyn, but downregulated after 200-kdyn lesions. It remained reduced in the PAG of severely lesioned animals, paralleling their prolonged neuropathic pain-related behavior. Double-labeling revealed partial co-expression of CB(1) with the pain-related vanilloid receptor transient receptor potential vanilloid receptor 1 (TRPV1), and chemokines (CCL2 and CCL3). These chemokines were induced in the PAG, thalamus, and HC, especially in the chronic time course after severe SCI. Thus interactions of CB(1), C-C chemokines, and TRPV1 likely play a role in SCI-induced plastic changes in the brain, underlying emotional-affective pain responses and central pain development after spinal cord lesions.
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