High-intensity swimming alleviates nociception and neuroinflammation in a mouse model of chronic post-ischemia pain by activating the resolvin E1-chemerin receptor 23 axis in the spinal cord.

Neural Regen Res

Department of Neurology and Neurological Rehabilitation, Shanghai Yangzhi Rehabilitation Hospital (Shanghai Sunshine Rehabilitation Center), School of Medicine, Tongji University, Shanghai, China.

Published: November 2023

Physical exercise effectively alleviates chronic pain associated with complex regional pain syndrome type-I. However, the mechanism of exercise-induced analgesia has not been clarified. Recent studies have shown that the specialized pro-resolving lipid mediator resolvin E1 promotes relief of pathologic pain by binding to chemerin receptor 23 in the nervous system. However, whether the resolvin E1-chemerin receptor 23 axis is involved in exercise-induced analgesia in complex regional pain syndrome type-I has not been demonstrated. In the present study, a mouse model of chronic post-ischemia pain was established to mimic complex regional pain syndrome type-I and subjected to an intervention involving swimming at different intensities. Chronic pain was reduced only in mice that engaged in high-intensity swimming. The resolvin E1-chemerin receptor 23 axis was clearly downregulated in the spinal cord of mice with chronic pain, while high-intensity swimming restored expression of resolvin E1 and chemerin receptor 23. Finally, shRNA-mediated silencing of chemerin receptor 23 in the spinal cord reversed the analgesic effect of high-intensity swimming exercise on chronic post-ischemic pain and the anti-inflammatory polarization of microglia in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. These findings suggest that high-intensity swimming can decrease chronic pain via the endogenous resolvin E1-chemerin receptor 23 axis in the spinal cord.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10360102PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/1673-5374.371373DOI Listing

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