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Papers of the Week


Papers: 11 Jun 2022 - 17 Jun 2022


Pharmacology/Drug Development


2022 Jun 13


J Neurosci

Post-surgical latent pain sensitization is driven by descending serotonergic facilitation and masked by µ-opioid receptor constitutive activity (MOR) in the rostral ventromedial medulla.

Abstract

Following tissue injury, latent sensitization (LS) of nociceptive signaling can persist indefinitely, kept in remission by compensatory µ-opioid receptor constitutive activity (MOR) in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. To demonstrate LS, we conducted plantar incision in mice and then waited 3-4 weeks for hypersensitivity to resolve. At this time (remission), systemic administration of the opioid receptor antagonist/inverse agonist naltrexone reinstated mechanical and heat hypersensitivity. We first tested the hypothesis that LS extends to serotonergic neurons in the rostral ventral medulla (RVM) that convey pronociceptive input to the spinal cord. We report that in male and female mice, hypersensitivity was accompanied by increased Fos expression in serotonergic neurons of the RVM, abolished upon chemogenetic inhibition of RVM 5-HT neurons, and blocked by intrathecal injection of the 5-HTR antagonist ondansetron; the 5-HTR antagonist MDL-11,939 had no effect. Second, to test for MOR, we microinjected the MOR inverse agonist CTAP and/or neutral opioid receptor antagonist 6β-naltrexol. Intra-RVM CTAP produced mechanical hypersensitivity at both hindpaws. 6β-naltrexol had no effect by itself, but blocked CTAP-induced hypersensitivity. This indicates that MOR, rather than an opioid ligand-dependent mechanism, maintains LS in remission. We conclude that incision establishes LS in descending RVM 5-HT neurons that drives pronociceptive 5-HTR signaling in the dorsal horn, and this LS is tonically opposed by MOR in the RVM. The 5-HT receptor is a promising therapeutic target for the development of drugs to prevent the transition from acute to chronic post-surgical pain.Surgery leads to latent pain sensitization and a compensatory state of endogenous pain control that is maintained long after tissue healing. Here we show that either chemogenetic inhibition of serotonergic neuron activity in the rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM), or pharmacological inhibition of 5-HT receptor signaling at the spinal cord blocks behavioral signs of post-surgical latent sensitization. We conclude that µ-opioid receptor constitutive activity (MOR) in the RVM opposes descending serotonergic facilitation of LS, and that the 5-HT receptor is a promising therapeutic target for the development of drugs to prevent the transition from acute to chronic post-surgical pain.