Abstract

BackgroundMechanical pain hypersensitivity associated with physical trauma to peripheral nerve depends on T-helper (Th) cells expressing the algesic cytokine, interleukin (IL)-17A. Fibronectin (FN) isoform alternatively spliced within the IIICS region encoding the 25-residue-long connecting segment 1 (CS1) regulates T cell recruitment to the sites of inflammation. Herein, we analyzed the role of CS1-containing FN (FN-CS1) in IL-17A expression and pain after peripheral nerve damage.MethodsMass spectrometry, immunoblotting, and FN-CS1-specific immunofluorescence analyses were employed to examine FN expression after chronic constriction injury (CCI) in rat sciatic nerves. The acute intra-sciatic nerve injection of the synthetic CS1 peptide (a competitive inhibitor of the FN-CS1/α4 integrin binding) was used to elucidate the functional significance of FN-CS1 in mechanical and thermal pain hypersensitivity and IL-17A expression (by quantitative Taqman RT-PCR) after CCI. The CS1 peptide effects were analyzed in cultured primary Schwann cells, the major source of FN-CS1 in CCI nerves.ResultsFollowing CCI, FN expression in sciatic nerve increased with the dominant FN-CS1 deposition in endothelial cells, Schwann cells, and macrophages. Acute CS1 therapy attenuated mechanical allodynia (pain from innocuous stimulation) but not thermal hyperalgesia and reduced the levels of IL-17A expression in the injured nerve. CS1 peptide inhibited the LPS- or starvation-stimulated activation of the stress ERK/MAPK pathway in cultured Schwann cells.ConclusionsAfter physical trauma to the peripheral nerve, FN-CS1 contributes to mechanical pain hypersensitivity by increasing the number of IL-17A-expressing (presumably, Th17) cells. CS1 peptide therapy can be developed for pharmacological control of neuropathic pain.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12974-015-0377-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Neuropathic pain, a severe pain state arising from a lesion or disease of the nervous system, is refractory to analgesics [1]

  • FN-connecting segment 1 (CS1) expression in constriction injury (CCI) nerve As schematically illustrated in Fig. 1a, FN is a dimer of the 220–250-kDa nearly identical monomers linked via disulfide bonds and encoded by a single FN transcript [30]

  • The presence of the TDELPQLVTLPHPNLHGPEILDVPSTVQK 2081–2109 peptide that included the CS1 sequence implied that the 2477-residue-long rat FN-CS1 splice variant was present in CCI nerve

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Summary

Introduction

Neuropathic pain, a severe pain state arising from a lesion or disease of the nervous system, is refractory to analgesics [1]. Liu et al Journal of Neuroinflammation (2015) 12:158 expressing pro-inflammatory/algesic interleukin (IL)-1β and IL-17A, respectively, to sustain neuropathic pain states that follow nerve trauma [4, 9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]. Inflammatory modulators universally expressed by various immune and glial cells, including TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6, indiscriminately modulate thermal and mechanical pain hypersensitivity [2,3,4,5,6,7,8] by stimulating heat-nociceptive Cafferents and mechanosensitive A-afferents, respectively [23, 24]. Mechanical pain hypersensitivity associated with physical trauma to peripheral nerve depends on T-helper (Th) cells expressing the algesic cytokine, interleukin (IL)-17A. We analyzed the role of CS1-containing FN (FN-CS1) in IL-17A expression and pain after peripheral nerve damage

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