Abstract

Key points Diabetes is thought to induce neuropathic pain through activation of dorsal horn sensory neurons in the spinal cord.Here we explore the impact of hyperglycaemia on the blood supply supporting the spinal cord and chronic pain development.In streptozotocin‐induced diabetic rats, neuropathic pain is accompanied by a decline in microvascular integrity in the dorsal horn. Hyperglycaemia‐induced degeneration of the endothelium in the dorsal horn was associated with a loss in vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)‐A165b expression. VEGF‐A165b treatment prevented diabetic neuropathic pain and degeneration of the endothelium in the spinal cord.Using an endothelial‐specific VEGFR2 knockout transgenic mouse model, the loss of endothelial VEGFR2 signalling led to a decline in vascular integrity in the dorsal horn and the development of hyperalgesia in VEGFR2 knockout mice.This highlights that vascular degeneration in the spinal cord could be a previously unidentified factor in the development of diabetic neuropathic pain. Abnormalities of neurovascular interactions within the CNS of diabetic patients is associated with the onset of many neurological disease states. However, to date, the link between the neurovascular network within the spinal cord and regulation of nociception has not been investigated despite neuropathic pain being common in diabetes. We hypothesised that hyperglycaemia‐induced endothelial degeneration in the spinal cord, due to suppression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)‐A/VEGFR2 signalling, induces diabetic neuropathic pain. Nociceptive pain behaviour was investigated in a chemically induced model of type 1 diabetes (streptozotocin induced, insulin supplemented; either vehicle or VEGF‐A165b treated) and an inducible endothelial knockdown of VEGFR2 (tamoxifen induced). Diabetic animals developed mechanical allodynia and heat hyperalgesia. This was associated with a reduction in the number of blood vessels and reduction in Evans blue extravasation in the lumbar spinal cord of diabetic animals versus age‐matched controls. Endothelial markers occludin, CD31 and VE‐cadherin were downregulated in the spinal cord of the diabetic group versus controls, and there was a concurrent reduction of VEGF‐A165b expression. In diabetic animals, VEGF‐A165b treatment (biweekly i.p., 20 ng g−1) restored normal Evans blue extravasation and prevented vascular degeneration, diabetes‐induced central neuron activation and neuropathic pain. Inducible knockdown of VEGFR2 (tamoxifen treated Tie2CreERT2‐vegfr2flfl mice) led to a reduction in blood vessel network volume in the lumbar spinal cord and development of heat hyperalgesia. These findings indicate that hyperglycaemia leads to a reduction in the VEGF‐A/VEGFR2 signalling cascade, resulting in endothelial dysfunction in the spinal cord, which could be an undiscovered contributing factor to diabetic neuropathic pain.

Highlights

  • Diabetes mellitus leads to an array of health complications that can cause significant morbidity

  • Diabetes resulted in increased mechanical hyperalgesia – a reduction in withdrawal threshold to a noxious stimulus when compared to both before diabetes (P < 0.05) and to vehicle/age matched animals at week 8 after STZ injection

  • We show here that the microvasculature in the spinal cord was disrupted in a rodent model of diabetic neuropathic pain, as demonstrated by a reduction in the volume of the blood vessel network in the spinal cord

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Summary

Introduction

Diabetes mellitus leads to an array of health complications that can cause significant morbidity. The plasticity of the nociceptive neuronal systems, both peripheral (Reichling & Levine, 2009) and central (Latremoliere, 2009), means that they can respond to disease and/or treatment such as in diabetes (Chen & Levine, 2001; Morgado et al 2010; Tan et al 2012). These responses lead to neuronal sensitisation, and in diabetes, chronic pain development. Despite this evidence for the involvement of spinal cord changes in the pathogenesis of diabetic neuropathic pain, there are few investigations into those mechanisms that may underlie the development of central sensitisation in the spinal cord in diabetes (Tan et al 2012; Lee-Kubli & Calcutt, 2014)

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