Macrophage memories of early-life injury drive neonatal nociceptive priming

早期生命损伤的巨噬细胞记忆驱动新生儿伤害感受启动

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作者:Adam J Dourson, Adewale O Fadaka, Anna M Warshak, Aditi Paranjpe, Benjamin Weinhaus, Luis F Queme, Megan C Hofmann, Heather M Evans, Omer A Donmez, Carmy Forney, Matthew T Weirauch, Leah C Kottyan, Daniel Lucas, George S Deepe Jr, Michael P Jankowski

Abstract

The developing peripheral nervous and immune systems are functionally distinct from those of adults. These systems are vulnerable to early-life injury, which influences outcomes related to nociception following subsequent injury later in life (i.e., "neonatal nociceptive priming"). The underpinnings of this phenomenon are unclear, although previous work indicates that macrophages are trained by inflammation and injury. Our findings show that macrophages are both necessary and partially sufficient to drive neonatal nociceptive priming, possibly due to a long-lasting remodeling in chromatin structure. The p75 neurotrophic factor receptor is an important effector in regulating neonatal nociceptive priming through modulation of the inflammatory profile of rodent and human macrophages. This "pain memory" is long lasting in females and can be transferred to a naive host to alter sex-specific pain-related behaviors. This study reveals a mechanism by which acute, neonatal post-surgical pain drives a peripheral immune-related predisposition to persistent pain following a subsequent injury.

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