Evidence that exogenous and endogenous fractalkine can induce spinal nociceptive facilitation in rats

ED Milligan, V Zapata, M Chacur… - European Journal of …, 2004 - Wiley Online Library
ED Milligan, V Zapata, M Chacur, D Schoeniger, J Biedenkapp, KA O'connor, GM Verge…
European Journal of Neuroscience, 2004Wiley Online Library
Recent evidence suggests that spinal cord glia can contribute to enhanced nociceptive
responses. However, the signals that cause glial activation are unknown. Fractalkine (CX3C
ligand‐1; CX3CL1) is a unique chemokine expressed on the extracellular surface of spinal
neurons and spinal sensory afferents. In the dorsal spinal cord, fractalkine receptors are
primarily expressed by microglia. As fractalkine can be released from neurons upon strong
activation, it has previously been suggested to be a neuron‐to‐glial signal that induces glial …
Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that spinal cord glia can contribute to enhanced nociceptive responses. However, the signals that cause glial activation are unknown. Fractalkine (CX3C ligand‐1; CX3CL1) is a unique chemokine expressed on the extracellular surface of spinal neurons and spinal sensory afferents. In the dorsal spinal cord, fractalkine receptors are primarily expressed by microglia. As fractalkine can be released from neurons upon strong activation, it has previously been suggested to be a neuron‐to‐glial signal that induces glial activation. The present series of experiments provide an initial investigation of the spinal pain modulatory effects of fractalkine. Intrathecal fractalkine produced dose‐dependent mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia. In addition, a single injection of fractalkine receptor antagonist (neutralizing antibody against rat CX3C receptor‐1; CX3CR1) delayed the development of mechanical allodynia and/or thermal hyperalgesia in two neuropathic pain models: chronic constriction injury (CCI) and sciatic inflammatory neuropathy. Intriguingly, anti‐CX3CR1 reduced nociceptive responses when administered 5–7 days after CCI, suggesting that prolonged release of fractalkine may contribute to the maintenance of neuropathic pain. Taken together, these initial investigations of spinal fractalkine effects suggest that exogenous and endogenous fractalkine are involved in spinal sensitization, including that induced by peripheral neuropathy.
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