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Minocycline attenuates mechanical allodynia and proinflammatory cytokine expression in rat models of pain facilitation
674
Citations
44
References
2005
Year
Pain FacilitationPain MedicineImmunologyNeuropathic PainRat ModelsMolecular PainNeuroinflammationInflammationMechanical AllodyniaPain SyndromeVon Frey TestPain ManagementNeuroimmunologyAnalgesicsHealth SciencesMechanobiologySpinal Cord InjuryNeuropharmacologyPharmacologyPain ResearchAnti-inflammatoryPhysiologyNeurosciencePain MechanismMedicine
Activated spinal cord microglia and astroglia release proinflammatory cytokines that facilitate pain transmission, contributing to enhanced pain states. Intrathecal minocycline, a selective microglial inhibitor, reduced mechanical allodynia in two pain facilitation models, delayed its onset in sciatic inflammatory neuropathy, attenuated early established allodynia, and lowered spinal IL‑1β, TNF‑α, and related cytokine mRNA and protein levels, indicating microglia are critical for pain initiation but less so for maintenance.
Activated glial cells (microglia and astroglia) in the spinal cord play a major role in mediating enhanced pain states by releasing proinflammatory cytokines and other substances thought to facilitate pain transmission. In the present study, we report that intrathecal administration of minocycline, a selective inhibitor of microglial cell activation, inhibits low threshold mechanical allodynia, as measured by the von Frey test, in two models of pain facilitation. In a rat model of neuropathic pain induced by sciatic nerve inflammation (sciatic inflammatory neuropathy, SIN), minocycline delayed the induction of allodynia in both acute and persistent paradigms. Moreover, minocycline was able to attenuate established SIN-induced allodynia 1 day, but not 1 week later, suggesting a limited role of microglial activation in more perseverative pain states. Our data are consistent with a crucial role for microglial cells in initiating, rather than maintaining, enhanced pain responses. In a model of spinal immune activation by intrathecal HIV-1 gp120, we show that the anti-allodynic effects of minocycline are associated with decreased microglial activation, attenuated mRNA expression of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), IL-1beta-converting enzyme, TNF-alpha-converting enzyme, IL-1 receptor antagonist and IL-10 in lumbar dorsal spinal cord, and reduced IL-1beta and TNF-alpha levels in the CSF. In contrast, no significant effects of minocycline were observed on gp120-induced IL-6 and cyclooxygenase-2 expression in spinal cord or CSF IL-6 levels. Taken together these data highlight the importance of microglial activation in the development of exaggerated pain states.
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