[HTML][HTML] Signaling pathways in sensitization: toward a nociceptor cell biology

T Hucho, JD Levine - Neuron, 2007 - cell.com
T Hucho, JD Levine
Neuron, 2007cell.com
Clinical pain is a serious public health issue. Treatment of pain-related suffering requires
knowledge of how pain signals are initially interpreted and subsequently transmitted and
perpetuated. This review article is one of three reviews in this issue of Neuron that address
our understanding of the pain process and possible solutions to the problem from both
cellular-and systems-level viewpoints. The electrophysiological properties of peripheral
neurons activated by noxious stimuli, the primary afferent nociceptors, have been …
Clinical pain is a serious public health issue. Treatment of pain-related suffering requires knowledge of how pain signals are initially interpreted and subsequently transmitted and perpetuated. This review article is one of three reviews in this issue of Neuron that address our understanding of the pain process and possible solutions to the problem from both cellular- and systems-level viewpoints.
The electrophysiological properties of peripheral neurons activated by noxious stimuli, the primary afferent nociceptors, have been investigated intensively, and our knowledge about the molecular basis of transducers for noxious stimuli has increased greatly. In contrast, understanding of the intracellular signaling mechanisms regulating nociceptor sensitization downstream of ligand binding to the receptors is still at a relatively nascent stage. After outlining the initiated signaling cascades, we discuss the emerging plasticity within these cascades and the importance of subcellular compartmentalization. In addition, the recently realized importance of functional interactions with the extracellular matrix, cytoskeleton, intracellular organelles such as mitochondria, and sex hormones will be introduced. This burgeoning literature establishes new cellular features crucial for the function of nociceptive neurons and argues that additional focus should be placed on understanding the complex integration of cellular events that make up the "cell biology of pain."
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