Brain and Mind Centre, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Pain. 2024 Apr 1;165(4):753-771. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003106. Epub 2023 Nov 14.
The past 20 years have seen a dramatic shift in our understanding of the role of the immune system in initiating and maintaining pain. Myeloid cells, including macrophages, dendritic cells, Langerhans cells, and mast cells, are increasingly implicated in bidirectional interactions with nerve fibres in rodent pain models. However, our understanding of the human setting is still poor. High-dimensional functional analyses have substantially changed myeloid cell classifications, with recently described subsets such as epidermal dendritic cells and DC3s unveiling new insight into how myeloid cells interact with nerve fibres. However, it is unclear whether this new understanding has informed the study of human chronic pain. In this article, we perform a scoping review investigating neuroimmune interactions between myeloid cells and peripheral nerve fibres in human chronic pain conditions. We found 37 papers from multiple pain states addressing this aim in skin, cornea, peripheral nerve, endometrium, and tumour, with macrophages, Langerhans cells, and mast cells the most investigated. The directionality of results between studies was inconsistent, although the clearest pattern was an increase in macrophage frequency across conditions, phases, and tissues. Myeloid cell definitions were often outdated and lacked correspondence with the stated cell types of interest; overreliance on morphology and traditional structural markers gave limited insight into the functional characteristics of investigated cells. We therefore critically reappraise the existing literature considering contemporary myeloid cell biology and advocate for the application of established and emerging high-dimensional proteomic and transcriptomic single-cell technologies to clarify the role of specific neuroimmune interactions in chronic pain.
过去 20 年来,我们对免疫系统在引发和维持疼痛方面的作用的理解发生了巨大变化。髓系细胞,包括巨噬细胞、树突状细胞、朗格汉斯细胞和肥大细胞,在啮齿动物疼痛模型中与神经纤维的双向相互作用中越来越受到关注。然而,我们对人类环境的理解仍然很差。高维功能分析极大地改变了髓系细胞的分类,最近描述的亚群,如表皮树突状细胞和 DC3,揭示了髓系细胞与神经纤维相互作用的新见解。然而,目前尚不清楚这种新的认识是否为人类慢性疼痛的研究提供了信息。在本文中,我们进行了范围综述,调查人类慢性疼痛情况下髓系细胞与周围神经纤维之间的神经免疫相互作用。我们从多个疼痛状态中找到了 37 篇论文,这些论文旨在解决皮肤、角膜、周围神经、子宫内膜和肿瘤中的这一目标,其中巨噬细胞、朗格汉斯细胞和肥大细胞是研究最多的细胞。研究之间的结果方向性不一致,尽管最明显的模式是在各种条件、阶段和组织中巨噬细胞频率增加。髓系细胞的定义往往过时,与所关注的细胞类型不一致;过度依赖形态学和传统的结构标记物对研究细胞的功能特征提供了有限的见解。因此,我们批判性地重新评估了现有的文献,考虑了当代髓系细胞生物学,并提倡应用现有的和新兴的高维蛋白质组学和转录组学单细胞技术来阐明特定神经免疫相互作用在慢性疼痛中的作用。