AI Article Synopsis

  • Pain signals are sent through a complex pathway involving glutamate and specific proteins like NECAB2, which plays a role in regulating pain sensation.
  • Research using techniques like histochemical analyses and RNA-sequencing showed that NECAB2 is found in certain sensory neurons and decreases after nerve injury, suggesting its involvement in pain processing.
  • Experiments with mice lacking NECAB2 revealed that this protein is essential for inflammatory pain signaling, and restoring its function could significantly reduce pain sensitivity.

Article Abstract

Pain signals are transmitted by multisynaptic glutamatergic pathways. Their first synapse between primary nociceptors and excitatory spinal interneurons gates the sensory load. In this pathway, glutamate release is orchestrated by Ca2+-sensor proteins, with N-terminal EF-hand Ca2+-binding protein 2 (NECAB2) being particular abundant. However, neither the importance of NECAB2+ neuronal contingents in dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) and spinal cord nor the function determination by NECAB2 has been defined. A combination of histochemical analyses and single-cell RNA-sequencing showed NECAB2 in small- and medium-sized C- and Aδ D-hair low-threshold mechanoreceptors in DRGs, as well as in protein kinase C γ excitatory spinal interneurons. NECAB2 was downregulated by peripheral nerve injury, leading to the hypothesis that NECAB2 loss of function could limit pain sensation. Indeed, Necab2-/- mice reached a pain-free state significantly faster after peripheral inflammation than did WT littermates. Genetic access to transiently activated neurons revealed that a mediodorsal cohort of NECAB2+ neurons mediates inflammatory pain in the mouse spinal dorsal horn. Here, besides dampening excitatory transmission in spinal interneurons, NECAB2 limited pronociceptive brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) release from sensory afferents. Hoxb8-dependent reinstatement of NECAB2 expression in Necab2-/- mice then demonstrated that spinal and DRG NECAB2 alone could control inflammation-induced sensory hypersensitivity. Overall, we identify NECAB2 as a critical component of pronociceptive pain signaling, whose inactivation offers substantial pain relief.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6118643PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI120913DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

spinal interneurons
12
necab2
10
ca2+-binding protein
8
protein necab2
8
inflammatory pain
8
excitatory spinal
8
interneurons necab2
8
necab2-/- mice
8
pain
6
spinal
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!