McIlwrath S L, Nesemeier R, Ma F, Oz H S, Zhang L, Westlund K N
Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, USA.
Eur J Pain. 2017 Aug;21(7):1209-1223. doi: 10.1002/ejp.1021. Epub 2017 Mar 20.
Patients with temporomandibular joint disorders (TMD), reactive arthritis and rheumatoid arthritis often have combined etiology of hereditary and microenvironmental factors contributing to joint pain. Multiple clinical and animal studies indicate 'double-hit' inflammatory insults can cause chronic inflammation. The first inflammatory insult primes the immune system and subsequent insults elicit amplified responses. The present 'double hit' study produced a chronic orofacial pain model in mice with genetic deletion of both TNFα receptors (TNFR1/R2-/-), investigating the main nociceptive signalling pathways in comparisons to wild type mice.
An initial inflammatory insult was given unilaterally into the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). Secondary hypersensitivity was tested on the skin over the TMJ throughout the experiment. Three weeks later after complete reversal of hypersensitivity, a second inflammatory insult was imposed on the colon. Pharmacological interventions were tested for efficacy after week 10 when hypersensitivity was chronic in TNFR1/R2-/- mice. Serum cytokines were analysed at Days 1, 14, and Week 18.
The double hit insult produced chronic hypersensitivity continuing through the 4-month experimental timeline in the absence of TNFα signalling. P2X7 and NMDA receptor antagonists temporarily attenuated chronic hypersensitivity. Serum cytokine/chemokine analysis on Day 14 when CFA induced hypersensitivity was resolved identified increased levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines CCL2, CXCL9, CXCL10, RANTES and decreased levels of anti-inflammatory cytokines IL-1ra and IL-4 in TNFR1/R2-/- compared to WT mice.
These data suggest a causal feed-forward signalling cascade of these little studied cytokines have the potential to cause recrudescence in this orofacial inflammatory pain model in the absence of TNFα signalling.
Using a mouse model of chronic inflammatory temporomandibular joint disorder, we determined that absence of functional TNFR1/R2 induces aberrant inflammatory signalling caused by other increased pro-inflammatory and decreased anti-inflammatory cytokines that could serve as blood biomarkers and may predict disease progression.
颞下颌关节紊乱症(TMD)、反应性关节炎和类风湿性关节炎患者的关节疼痛通常由遗传和微环境因素共同导致。多项临床和动物研究表明,“双重打击”性炎症损伤可引发慢性炎症。首次炎症损伤使免疫系统致敏,随后的损伤引发放大反应。本“双重打击”研究在同时缺失两种肿瘤坏死因子α受体(TNFR1/R2-/-)的基因敲除小鼠中建立了慢性口面部疼痛模型,并与野生型小鼠对比,研究主要的伤害性信号传导通路。
对颞下颌关节(TMJ)进行单侧初次炎症损伤。在整个实验过程中,对TMJ上方皮肤进行继发性超敏反应测试。在超敏反应完全消退三周后,对结肠施加第二次炎症损伤。在TNFR1/R2-/-小鼠出现慢性超敏反应的第10周后,测试药物干预的效果。在第1天、第14天和第18周分析血清细胞因子。
在缺乏肿瘤坏死因子α信号传导的情况下,双重打击损伤在4个月的实验时间内产生了持续的慢性超敏反应。P2X7和NMDA受体拮抗剂可暂时减轻慢性超敏反应。在第14天,当弗氏完全佐剂诱导的超敏反应消退时,与野生型小鼠相比,TNFR1/R基因敲除小鼠血清中促炎细胞因子CCL2、CXCL9、CXCL10、RANTES水平升高,抗炎细胞因子IL-1ra和IL-4水平降低。
这些数据表明,在缺乏肿瘤坏死因子α信号传导的情况下,这些研究较少的细胞因子之间存在因果性前馈信号级联反应,有可能在这种口面部炎性疼痛模型中导致复发。
通过慢性炎症性颞下颌关节紊乱症小鼠模型,我们确定功能性TNFR1/R2的缺失会诱导由其他促炎细胞因子增加和抗炎细胞因子减少引起的异常炎症信号传导,这些细胞因子可作为血液生物标志物,并可能预测疾病进展。