Neuroscience and Mental Health Institute, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2E1, Canada.
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Alberta, Clinical Sciences Building, 2-150, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2G3, Canada.
Sci Rep. 2022 Dec 5;12(1):20995. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-25295-y.
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is an autoimmune disease with notable sex differences. Women are not only more likely to develop MS but are also more likely than men to experience neuropathic pain in the disease. It has been postulated that neuropathic pain in MS can originate in the peripheral nervous system at the level of the dorsal root ganglia (DRG), which houses primary pain sensing neurons (nociceptors). These nociceptors become hyperexcitable in response to inflammation, leading to peripheral sensitization and eventually central sensitization, which maintains pain long-term. The mouse model experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) is a good model for human MS as it replicates classic MS symptoms including pain. Using EAE mice as well as naïve primary mouse DRG neurons cultured in vitro, we sought to characterize sex differences, specifically in peripheral sensory neurons. We found sex differences in the inflammatory profile of the EAE DRG, and in the TNFα downstream signaling pathways activated intracellularly in cultured nociceptors. We also found increased cell death with TNFα treatment. Given that TNFα signaling has been shown to initiate intrinsic apoptosis through mitochondrial disruption, this led us to investigate sex differences in the mitochondria's response to TNFα. Our results demonstrate that male sensory neurons are more sensitive to mitochondrial stress, making them prone to neuronal injury. In contrast, female sensory neurons appear to be more resistant to mitochondrial stress and exhibit an inflammatory and regenerative phenotype that may underlie greater nociceptor hyperexcitability and pain. Understanding these sex differences at the level of the primary sensory neuron is an important first step in our eventual goal of developing sex-specific treatments to halt pain development in the periphery before central sensitization is established.
多发性硬化症(MS)是一种自身免疫性疾病,具有显著的性别差异。女性不仅更易患 MS,而且在疾病中出现神经性疼痛的可能性也高于男性。据推测,MS 中的神经性疼痛可能起源于背根神经节(DRG)的周围神经系统,其中包含主要的疼痛感知神经元(伤害感受器)。这些伤害感受器在炎症反应下变得过度兴奋,导致周围敏化,最终导致中枢敏化,从而长期维持疼痛。实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎(EAE)小鼠模型是研究人类 MS 的良好模型,因为它复制了包括疼痛在内的经典 MS 症状。我们使用 EAE 小鼠以及体外培养的幼稚原发性小鼠 DRG 神经元,旨在表征性别差异,特别是在外周感觉神经元中。我们发现 EAE DRG 中的炎症特征存在性别差异,并且在培养的伤害感受器中细胞内激活的 TNFα 下游信号通路也存在性别差异。我们还发现 TNFα 处理后细胞死亡增加。鉴于 TNFα 信号已被证明通过线粒体破坏引发内在凋亡,这促使我们研究 TNFα 对线粒体反应的性别差异。我们的结果表明,雄性感觉神经元对线粒体应激更为敏感,使它们容易受到神经元损伤。相比之下,雌性感觉神经元似乎对线粒体应激更具抵抗力,并表现出炎症和再生表型,这可能是伤害感受器过度兴奋和疼痛的基础。了解初级感觉神经元水平的这些性别差异是我们最终目标的重要第一步,即开发针对特定性别的治疗方法,以在中枢敏化建立之前阻止周围疼痛的发展。