Department of Anesthesia, Division of Pain Management, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio 45229.
Department of Anesthesia, Division of Pain Management, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio 45229
J Neurosci. 2021 May 19;41(20):4410-4427. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3081-20.2021. Epub 2021 Apr 22.
A number of cellular systems work in concert to modulate nociceptive processing in the periphery, but the mechanisms that regulate neonatal nociception may be distinct compared with adults. Our previous work indicated a relationship between neonatal hypersensitivity and growth hormone (GH) signaling. Here, we explored the peripheral mechanisms by which GH modulated neonatal nociception under normal and injury conditions (incision) in male and female mice. We found that GH receptor (GHr) signaling in primary afferents maintains a tonic inhibition of peripheral hypersensitivity. After injury, a macrophage dependent displacement of injury-site GH was found to modulate neuronal transcription at least in part via serum response factor (SRF) regulation. A single GH injection into the injured hindpaw muscle effectively restored available GH signaling to neurons and prevented acute pain-like behaviors, primary afferent sensitization, and neuronal gene expression changes. GH treatment also inhibited long-term somatosensory changes observed after repeated peripheral insult. Results may indicate a novel mechanism of neonatal nociception. Although it is noted that mechanisms of pain development in early life are unique compared with adults, little research focuses on neonatal-specific peripheral mechanisms of nociception. This gap is evident in the lack of specialized care for infants following an injury including surgeries. This report evaluates how distinct cellular systems in the periphery including the endocrine, immune and nervous systems work together to modulate neonatal-specific nociception. We uncovered a novel mechanism by which muscle injury induces a macrophage-dependent sequestration of peripheral growth hormone (GH) that effectively removes its normal tonic inhibition of neonatal nociceptors to promote acute pain-like behaviors. Results indicate a possible new strategy for treatment of neonatal postsurgical pain.
许多细胞系统协同作用,调节外周的伤害感受处理,但调节新生儿痛觉的机制可能与成人不同。我们之前的工作表明,新生儿敏感性与生长激素 (GH) 信号之间存在关系。在这里,我们探讨了 GH 在正常和损伤条件(切口)下调节雄性和雌性小鼠外周新生儿痛觉的外周机制。我们发现,初级传入中的 GH 受体 (GHr) 信号通过维持外周超敏反应的紧张性抑制来调节新生儿痛觉。损伤后,发现损伤部位 GH 依赖巨噬细胞的移位至少部分通过血清反应因子 (SRF) 调节来调节神经元转录。将 GH 单次注射到受伤的后脚掌肌肉中,可有效地将可用的 GH 信号恢复到神经元,防止急性痛样行为、初级传入敏化和神经元基因表达变化。GH 治疗还抑制了重复外周损伤后观察到的长期体感变化。结果可能表明了新生儿痛觉的一种新机制。尽管注意到婴儿期疼痛发展的机制与成人不同,但很少有研究关注新生儿外周痛觉的特定机制。这一差距在受伤后包括手术在内,婴儿缺乏专门护理时尤为明显。本报告评估了包括内分泌、免疫和神经系统在内的外周不同细胞系统如何协同作用,调节新生儿特有的痛觉。我们发现了一种新的机制,即肌肉损伤诱导外周生长激素 (GH) 的巨噬细胞依赖性隔离,有效地去除了其对新生儿伤害感受器的正常紧张性抑制,从而促进急性痛样行为。结果表明,一种新的新生儿术后疼痛治疗策略是可能的。