In mammals, motile cilia cover many organs, such as fallopian tubes, respiratory tracts and brain ventricles. The development and function of these organs critically depend on efficient directional fluid flow ensured by the alignment of ciliary beating. To identify the mechanisms involved in this process, we analysed motile cilia of mouse brain ventricles, using biophysical and molecular approaches. Our results highlight an original orientation mechanism for ependymal cilia whereby basal bodies first dock apically with random orientations, and then reorient in a common direction through a coupling between hydrodynamic forces and the planar cell polarity (PCP) protein Vangl2, within a limited time-frame. This identifies a direct link between external hydrodynamic cues and intracellular PCP signalling. Our findings extend known PCP mechanisms by integrating hydrodynamic forces as long-range polarity signals, argue for a possible sensory role of ependymal cilia, and will be of interest for the study of fluid flow-mediated morphogenesis.
Neuropathic pain from injury to the peripheral and CNS represents a major health care issue. We have investigated the role of IL-33/IL-33 receptor (ST2) signaling in experimental models of neuropathic pain in mice. Chronic constriction injury (CCI) of the sciatic nerve induced IL-33 production in the spinal cord. IL-33/citrine reporter mice revealed that oligodendrocytes are the main cells expressing IL-33 within the spinal cord together with a minor expression by neurons, microglia. and astrocytes. CCI-induced mechanical hyperalgesia was reduced in IL-33R (ST2)(-/ -) mice compared with wild-type (WT) mice. Intrathecal treatment of WT mice with soluble IL-33 receptor (IL-33 decoy receptor) markedly reduced CCI-induced hyperalgesia. Consistent with these observations, intrathecal injection of IL-33 enhanced CCI hyperalgesia and induced hyperalgesia in naive mice. IL-33-mediated hyperalgesia during CCI was dependent on a reciprocal relationship with TNF-α and IL-1β. IL-33-induced hyperalgesia was markedly attenuated by inhibitors of PI3K, mammalian target of rapamycin, MAPKs (p38, ERK, and JNK), NF-κB, and also by the inhibitors of glial cells (microglia and astrocytes). Furthermore, targeting these signaling pathways and cells inhibited IL-33-induced TNF-α and IL-1β production in the spinal cord. Our study, therefore, reveals an important role of oligodendrocyte-derived IL-33 in neuropathic pain.
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