AI Article Synopsis

  • * The research involved inducing neuropathic and inflammatory pain in genetically modified mice and tested various behaviors and cognitive functions afterwards.
  • * Results showed that chronic pain leads to reduced pain thresholds, worse learning and memory, and increased depression-like behaviors, with significant changes in brain protein levels associated with Alzheimer's pathology.

Article Abstract

Background: Chronic pain is linked to cognitive impairment; however, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. In the present study, we examined these mechanisms in a well-established mouse model of Alzheimer's disease (AD).

Methods: Neuropathic pain was modeled in 5-month-old transgenic APPswe/PS1dE9 (APP/PS1) mice by partial ligation of the sciatic nerve on the left side, and chronic inflammatory pain was modeled in another group of APP/PS1 mice by injecting them with complete Freund's adjuvant on the plantar surface of the left hind paw. Six weeks after molding, the animals were tested to assess pain threshold (von Frey filament), learning, memory (novel object recognition, Morris water maze, Y-maze, and passive avoidance), and depression-like symptoms (sucrose preference, tail suspension, and forced swimming). After behavioral testing, mice were sacrificed and the levels of p65, amyloid-β (residues 1-42) and phospho-tau in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex were assayed using western blotting, while interleukin (IL)-1β levels were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.

Results: Animals subjected to either type of chronic pain showed lower pain thresholds, more severe deficits in learning and memory, and stronger depression-like symptoms than the corresponding control animals. Either type of chronic pain was associated with upregulation of p65, amyloid-β (1-42), and IL-1β in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex, as well as higher levels of phosphorylated tau.

Conclusions: Chronic pain may exacerbate cognitive deficits and depression-like symptoms in APP/PS1 mice by worsening pathology related to amyloid-β and tau and by upregulating signaling involving IL-1β and p65.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2024.148843DOI Listing

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