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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 15, 2003, 23(8):3221
Focal Lysolecithin-Induced Demyelination of Peripheral Afferents
Results in Neuropathic Pain Behavior That Is Attenuated by Cannabinoids
Victoria C. J.
Wallace,
David F.
Cottrell,
Peter J.
Brophy, and
Susan M.
Fleetwood-Walker
Centre for Neuroscience Research, Division of Preclinical
Veterinary Sciences, The Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, The
University of Edinburgh, Summerhall, Edinburgh EH9 1QH, United Kingdom
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ABSTRACT |
Demyelinating diseases can be associated with painful sensory
phenomena such as tactile allodynia and hyperalgesia. To study the
mechanisms underlying demyelination-induced pain, we have characterized
a novel model of demyelination of the sciatic or saphenous nerve.
Topical lysolecithin application causes focal demyelination of afferent
nerve A-fibers without axonal loss, as assessed either by electron and
light microscopy or by immunohistochemical analysis of dorsal root
ganglia (DRG) for a neuronal injury marker, activating transcription
factor 3. Focal demyelination is accompanied by spontaneous action
potentials in afferents and increased expression of neuropeptide Y and
Nav1.3 sodium channels specifically in DRG neurons that
coexpress a specific marker of myelinated afferents. In contrast,
expression of tetrodotoxin-resistant, Nav1.8 sodium channels is specifically decreased in the same subgroup of DRG cells.
Central sensitization of somatosensory processing is also induced, with
increased behavioral reflex responsiveness to thermal and mechanical
stimuli. These changes are reversed by intrathecal administration of an
NMDA receptor antagonist or cannabinoid (CB) receptor agonist, but not
by a µ-opioid receptor agonist. Recovery of behavioral reflexes
occurred ~3 weeks after lysolecithin treatment. This is the first
time that demyelination of afferent A-fibers has been shown to
specifically induce neuropathic pain and indicates that axonal damage
is not a prerequisite for development of the pain state. The profile of
phenotypic changes in DRG is distinct from other pain models and
displays a sensitivity to NMDA and CB receptor agents that may be
exploitable therapeutically.
Key words:
afferents; demyelination; neuropathic pain; cannabinoids; sodium channels; DRG
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Introduction |
Both the CNS and the
peripheral nervous system (PNS) are susceptible to demyelinating
disorders in humans. In the PNS, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease types 1 and 4 (CMT1 and CMT4) and Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) are
accompanied not only by segmental demyelination with reduced rates of
nerve impulse transmission and impaired motor function, but also by
abnormal sensory phenomena such as tactile allodynia (the perception of
normally innocuous stimuli such as touching and brushing as painful),
hyperalgesia (a heightened response to painful stimuli), and
spontaneous pain (Carter et al., 1998 ). However, the mechanisms
underlying neuropathic pain in demyelinating disease are poorly
understood (Rasminsky, 1981 ).
Recently, we showed that mice lacking a functional
Periaxin (Prx) gene develop a late-onset
peripheral demyelination, which is associated with reflex behaviors
corresponding to allodynia and hyperalgesia (Gillespie et al., 2000 ).
These enhanced sensory responses are reversible by spinal
administration of an NMDA receptor antagonist, implying a critical role
for central sensitization in the pain behavior. Recently, mutations in
the human PRX gene have been shown to underlie CMT4.
Consistent with the mouse model, there is a particularly large sensory
involvement in patients with CMT4F, who display various distal
abnormalities including pain in both upper and lower extremities
(Delague et al., 2000 ; Boerkoel et al., 2001 ; Guilbot et al., 2001 ;
Takashima et al., 2002 ).
To determine how peripheral demyelination might contribute to the
development of the ensuing neuropathic pain state, we have characterized a model of focal, reversible peripheral nerve
demyelination of the sciatic or saphenous nerve using the selective
demyelinating agent lysolecithin (lysophosphatidyl choline) (Hall and
Gregson, 1971 ). Using this model we have studied the effects of
demyelination on peripheral nerve function and on the phenotype of
cells in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG), including changes in the
expression of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), galanin,
neuropeptide Y (NPY), and the Nav1.8 (sensory
neuron-specific type 1) and Nav1.3 (brain type
III) sodium channels. Furthermore, we have investigated key changes in
somatosensory processing within the spinal cord. We show for the first
time that transient demyelination causes a distinctive profile of
phenotypic changes in DRG. These changes are accompanied by spontaneous
activity in afferents and central sensitization of sensory processing,
all in the apparent absence of damage to the afferent axons. The
sensitivity of the behavioral reflex changes to NMDA receptor
antagonists and cannabinoid (CB) receptor agonists suggests therapeutic
strategies for pain induced by demyelination.
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Materials and Methods |
Animals and surgical methods. C57BL/6 mice over the
age of 6 weeks were used for all experiments. Animals were anesthetized with 0.3 ml 25% Sagatal (Rhone Merieux, Hertfordshire,
UK) in sterile physiological saline (intraperitoneal) and maintained on
1-2% halothane (Zeneca, Cheshire, UK) in
O2. For all demyelination experiments,
lysolecithin (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was dissolved in
physiological saline to give a final concentration of 15 mg/ml.
Saphenous and sciatic nerve demyelination. The saphenous
branch of the femoral nerve was exposed at mid thigh level, and
5-10 µl lysolecithin solution was applied topically via a 25 gauge needle (Terumo) over a length of 5-6 mm, ensuring that the
nerve remained coated with the solution for 10 min after which the
reagent was washed off with sterile saline and the incision site was
closed with 4.0 suture thread, marking the application site. For
sciatic nerve demyelination experiments, once the nerve was exposed at mid thigh level, the two larger fascicles (tibial and peroneal) were
separated by blunt dissection from the smallest sural fascicle. Lysolecithin was applied to the tibial and peroneal fascicles for 15 min. Sham control animals were prepared for both nerve preparations by
omitting lysolecithin from the solution so that the nerve was exposed
as above and sterile saline was applied topically for the relevant time.
Behavioral reflex testing. The threshold for hindpaw
withdrawal in response to graded mechanical stimulation was measured in
conscious animals with von Frey filaments (Stoelting, Wood Dale, IL), which provide a calibrated indentation pressure against the
hairless skin of the hindpaws. The threshold response was defined by
the filament that caused foot withdrawal at least 5 times in every 10 applications (Meyer et al., 1979 ; Chaplan et al., 1997 ). The
time for hindpaw withdrawal in response to a quantified noxious thermal
stimulus was measured using the Hargreaves-Plantar apparatus (Ugo
Basile). The thermal stimulus was of infrared intensity setting 30 (>50°C) applied to the mid-plantar surface of each hindpaw (Hargreaves et al., 1988 ). The withdrawal was characterized as
a brief paw flick, and the withdrawal latency was recorded in seconds.
Baseline measurements were obtained for all animals over the
course of 1 week before surgery. Behavioral reflex tests were performed
after surgery to identify the development of any reflex sensitivity in
treated animals. The threshold value at each time point tested was
calculated as the mean ± SEM. Any statistically significant
differences in paw withdrawal threshold from mechanical stimulation
between ipsilateral and contralateral paws were determined by a
Mann-Whitney rank sum test. Likewise, any statistically significant differences in paw withdrawal latency from thermal stimulation were
determined by a Student's paired t test.
Morphological investigations. Nerve morphology was examined
in animals that previously had focal demyelination induced in either
the saphenous or sciatic nerve. Sections of nerve from the region of
lysolecithin application were dissected 13 d later, fixed
for 4 hr in 2.5% glutaraldehyde and 2% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 7.3, postfixed in
OsO, and embedded in Araldite.
For light microscopy, 1 µm resin sections of the demyelinated
section of the nerve (~7-10 mm) were stained with Toluidine blue.
Once the area of maximal demyelination was established by bright-field
microscopy, ultrathin (80 nm) sections were stained with uranyl acetate
and lead citrate and examined on a Phillips BioTwin electron
microscope (FEI, UK Ltd., Cambridge, UK). Nerve counts were performed
at the electron microscope (EM) level so that the amount of
demyelination and integrity of large-diameter and small-diameter,
unmyelinated axons could be determined. C-fibers were identified as
small-diameter unmyelinated fibers present in bundles, surrounded by
Schwann cell cytoplasm. The number of intact C-fibers was calculated
from EM photographs of cross sections of the entire nerve. To minimize
error, the images from all nerves (n = 4 per group)
were randomly counted three times (while the source of each image was
concealed), and the average for each nerve was calculated. To count the
number of myelinated A-fibers, axons with all levels of myelination,
including those that were completely demyelinated, must be considered.
Therefore, A-fibers were identified as not only fibers with a myelin
sheath, but also solitary fibers with a smaller overall diameter
attributable to loss of myelin. This allowed distinction of
demyelinated fibers from unmyelinated fibers, which usually occur in
bundles. The statistical significance of any difference between treated
and naive or sham nerves was determined using a Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA on ranks with an all pair-wise multiple comparisons procedure (Dunn's method).
G-ratio. The g-ratio of an axon is a measure of myelin
thickness calculated by dividing the axonal diameter by the total
diameter of axon plus myelin sheath. This gives an indication of the
level of demyelination in axons that are not completely demyelinated by
lysolecithin treatment. The g-ratios of myelinated fibers were calculated from EM photographs of the whole cross-sectional area of
each nerve using the IP Lab Spectrum P program
(Scanalytics, Fairfax, VA). This also calculates the
number of myelinated axons in the sample (292 µm2) and enables the proportion of
completely demyelinated axons per nerve to be determined. The
statistical significance of any difference among treated,
naïve, or sham nerves was determined by Kruskal-Wallis one-way
ANOVA on ranks with an all pair-wise multiple comparisons procedure
(Dunn's method).
Electrophysiology. Electrophysiological recording of
activity and function in afferent fiber units of peripheral nerve was performed on animals that previously had focal demyelination induced in
the saphenous nerve. Recording experiments were performed on days 3 and
5 after surgery, times at which behavioral reflex sensitization had not
developed, and also on days 11, 12, and 13 after surgery, corresponding
to the peak time of development of behavioral reflex sensitization.
Mice were anesthetized with 5% urethane (1.25 gm/kg, i.p.) and
maintained at 36-37°C with a radiant heat lamp. The saphenous nerve
was exposed in the mid thigh and dissected from its associated vein and artery. Further dissection under liquid paraffin enabled the
identification of afferent preparations comprising a small number of
units. The mechanosensitivity of sensory receptors with low thresholds
was measured using calibrated von Frey filaments, and the thermal
threshold was measured with a calibrated radiant heat source. The
mechanical threshold was defined as the pressure required to cause
units to fire in response to direct application of von Frey filaments
to the central zone of the identified receptive field, and the thermal
threshold was defined as the temperature required to cause units to
fire in response to direct application of the radiant heat source to
the central zone of the identified receptive field. The conduction
velocity of single identified afferent fibers was determined using
bipolar electrodes and the peripheral stimulus technique (Iggo, 1958 ).
The percentage of axons in each conduction velocity range, from 0-3
m/sec up to 18-21 m/sec, was calculated, and the statistical
significance of any difference between each treatment group was
determined by a Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA on ranks with all
pair-wise multiple comparisons procedure (Dunn's method). All
recording traces of spike activity were obtained via a direct link of
the oscilloscope to the Powerlab/MacLab Chart v3.6/s
program (AD Instruments, Oxford, UK). Data were
subsequently analyzed on the Claris Works 4.0 illustrator program
(Claris Corporation, Smart Computing, Lincoln, NE).
Immunohistochemistry. For fixed-tissue immunohistochemistry,
animals that 13 d previously had lysolecithin treatment of the right sciatic nerve or saphenous nerve were deeply anesthetized with
halothane and perfused through the heart with heparinized saline
followed by 4% paraformaldehyde (Sigma) in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (Sigma). The DRG
ipsilateral and contralateral to the lysolecithin-treated nerve or
sham-operated nerve were removed, postfixed with the same fixative for
2 hr, and transferred through increasing concentrations of sucrose in
0.1 M phosphate buffer for 1 hr and left
overnight in 25% sucrose in 0.1 M phosphate
buffer. The DRG were then embedded in OCT mounting medium (Tissue
Tek) and frozen over liquid nitrogen. For nonperfused tissue
immunohistochemistry, animals were killed by
CO2 inhalation 13 d after lysolecithin
treatment. DRG ipsilateral and contralateral to the
lysolecithin-treated nerve or sham-operated nerve were removed, snap
frozen, and embedded in OCT mounting medium. Cryostat sections of all
DRG (10 µm) were thaw-mounted on glass slides precoated with
poly-L-lysine (Merck-BDH). For saphenous nerve-treated
animals, L3, L4, and L5 DRG were analyzed, and for sciatic-treated
animals, L4, L5, and L6 DRG were analyzed (all n = 4).
For colocalization of Nav1.8 or the peptides CGRP
or NPY with the A-fiber cell body marker neurofilament 200 kDa (NF-200) (Lawson and Waddell, 1991 ; Michael et al., 1999 ), or the C-fiber cell
body marker peripherin (Goldstein et al., 1991 ), nonperfused DRG
sections were immersion-fixed for 15 min in 4% paraformaldehyde in
PBS. Sections were preincubated in buffer (0.1 M
PBS, pH 7.4, containing 0.2% Triton X-100 and 2% gelatin) containing
10% normal goat serum or 10% normal donkey serum (for CGRP detection)
for 1 hr at room temperature and incubated with primary antibodies diluted in buffer containing 4% goat or donkey serum overnight at
4°C. Perfused tissue was used for detecting colocalization of
Nav1.3, galanin, or activating transcription
factor 3 (ATF3) (Tsujino et al., 2000 ) with NF-200 or peripherin. The
immunohistochemical procedure used was as for fresh tissue, omitting
the immersion-fixation step.
Antisera were used at the following concentrations: rabbit
anti-Nav1.8 [1:200; K107 supplied by S. Tate,
GlaxoSmithKline; specificity of K107 was tested by
preincubating primary antibody with dilutions of the relevant antigenic
peptide (Amaya et al., 2000 )]; rabbit
anti-Nav1.3 sodium channel [1:200; Alomone
Labs, Jerusalem, Israel (Black et al., 1999 )]; sheep anti-CGRP
[1:1500; Affiniti, Exeter, UK (Todd, 1997 )]; rabbit anti-NPY
[1:1000, Peninsula Laboratories, Belmont, CA (Polgar et
al., 1999 )]; rabbit anti-galanin (1:2000; Advanced
Chemtech, Cambridgeshire, UK); rabbit anti-ATF3 (1:400;
Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA); mouse
monoclonal anti-NF-200 kDa [1:2000; clone N52; Sigma
(Bennett et al., 1998 )]; and mouse monoclonal anti-peripherin
[1:1000; Chemicon International, Harlow, UK (Amaya et
al., 2000 )]. Sections were then washed in buffer and incubated with
the appropriate secondary antibodies linked to either tetramethyl
rhodamine isothiocyanate (TRITC) (goat anti-mouse-TRITC, 1:200, to
detect all mouse primary antisera; Southern Biotechology,
Birmingham, AL) or fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) (goat
anti-rabbit-FITC, 1:200, to detect all goat primary antisera;
Cappell; donkey anti-sheep-FITC, 1:100, to detect
anti-CGRP primary antiserum; Jackson ImmunoResearch
Laboratories, West Grove, PA) for 2 hr at room temperature.
Three final washes in 0.1 M PBS were conducted before
coverslipping with Vecta-Shield (Vector Laboratories,
Burlingame, CA) for analysis. Control sections were processed as above
omitting the primary antisera. Observations were made and sections were
photographed on an Olympus microscope equipped for
epifluorescence. Counts of profiles labeled for immunopositive cells
were performed on four to five randomly selected 10 µm sections of
DRG (separation of 100 µm) from each of four animals in each group,
and only neurons with clear nuclei were counted. Results were expressed
either as a proportion of labeled profiles per section or the
proportion per total number of single- or double-labeled profiles from
all 16-20 sections. The statistical significance between groups was
tested by Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA on ranks with all pair-wise
multiple comparison procedures (Dunn's method).
Intrathecal administration of drugs. Animals with
focal demyelination induced in the saphenous nerve were used for all
intrathecal injection experiments. Baseline measurements for mechanical
allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia were recorded over a period of up to 2 hr before injection. The mice were briefly anesthetized with halothane and O2 and injected intrathecally at
the level of the L4 spinal vertebra using a 25 gauge needle with
the NMDA receptor antagonist
3-((R)-2-carboxypiperazine-4-yl)-propyl-1-phosphonic acid [(R)-CPP; Tocris Cookson, Bristol,
UK; 100 pmol/10 µl saline], the selective µ opioid receptor
agonist D-Ala2,
MePhe4, Gly-ol enkephalin (DAMGO; Tocris Cookson;
10 pmol/10 µl saline), the mixed
CB1/CB2
cannabinoid receptor agonist mesylate
(R)-(+)-(2,3-dihydro-5-methyl- 3-(4-morpholinylmethyl)
pyrrolo (1,2,3-de)-1,4-benzoxazin-6-yl)-1-naphthalenylmethanone [WIN 55,212-2; Tocris; 60 pmol/10 µl saline with 0.02%
dimethylformamide (DMF)], the selective CB1
receptor antagonist
N-(piperidin-1-yl)-5-(4-iodophenyl)-1-(2,3-dichlorophenyl)-4-methyl-1H- pyrazole-3-carboxamide
(AM 251; Tocris; 100 pmol/10 µl saline with 0.3% DMF), or a
combination of WIN 55,212-2 plus AM 251 (100 pmol/10 µl saline with
0.3% DMF). To determine the effects of each drug on both
mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia, behavioral reflex
testing commenced 15 min after injection to allow recovery from
anesthesia and continued every 5 min thereafter until readings returned
to baseline levels. For all drugs tested, any statistically significant
difference of the postinjection paw withdrawal from baseline paw
withdrawal thresholds was determined by a one-way repeated measures
ANOVA with Dunnet's multiple comparisons versus control group
post hoc analysis. Extensive control studies have shown that
intrathecal injections of the vehicles, saline, or 0.1-0.5% DMF in
saline have no effect on these behavioral reflex measures. Dye
injections using Pontamine Sky Blue demonstrated that over various time
periods up to 60 min after injection there was no spread of dye to the
proximal spinal nerve or DRG.
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Results |
Lysolecithin treatment causes behavioral allodynia
and hyperalgesia
Lysolecithin-treated mice displayed a markedly lowered threshold
in reflex tests both of cutaneous mechanical sensitization using
calibrated von Frey filaments and of thermal nociceptive sensitivity
(Fig. 1). The
heightened sensitivity to both tests was apparent from day 5 after
lysolecithin treatment of saphenous or sciatic nerve, but reached peak
values from day 9 until day 15 after surgery. Typically, after
lysolecithin treatment of the saphenous nerve, von Frey thresholds were
reduced from ~700 to ~300 mN/mm2, and
thermal withdrawal latencies were reduced from ~9 to 5 sec at peak
behavioral change. Similarly, after lysolecithin treatment of the
sciatic nerve, von Frey thresholds were reduced from ~600 to ~250
mN/mm2, and thermal withdrawal latencies
were reduced from ~11 to 5 sec at peak behavioral change. In each
case the changes recovered to baseline levels by 23 d after
treatment. There was no evidence for overt motor deficit after
lysolecithin treatment of either nerve. Furthermore, mice that had
undergone surgery and saline treatment of the saphenous or sciatic
nerve showed no change from baseline von Frey threshold withdrawal
values of between 600 and 700 mN/mm2 or
baseline thermal paw withdrawal latencies of ~10 sec
(n = 4 in each case).

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Figure 1.
Development of mechanical allodynia and thermal
hyperalgesia ipsilateral to lysolecithin treatment of the saphenous or
sciatic nerve. a, Filament indentation pressure
thresholds for paw withdrawal responses to von Frey filaments were
measured after lysolecithin treatment ( ) to one saphenous
(n = 6) (i) or one sciatic
nerve (n = 6) (ii). Statistical
significance of differences between ipsilateral ( ) and contralateral
( ) paws (*p < 0.05) was determined
by a Wilcoxon test. Each value is the mean ± SEM.
b, The time taken for hindpaw withdrawal from a noxious thermal stimulus was
measured after lysolecithin treatment ( ) to one saphenous
(n = 6) (i) or one sciatic
nerve (n = 6) (ii). Statistical
significance between ipsilateral ( ) and contralateral ( ) paws
(*p < 0.05) was determined by a paired Student's
t test. Each value is the mean ± SEM.
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Lysolecithin treatment causes demyelination without overt axonal
damage or sensory loss
To determine the extent of demyelination as a result of
lysolecithin treatment, we examined demyelinated, sham, and naive peripheral nerves by light and electron microscopy at the time of peak
behavioral change. A maximum of 40% of A-fibers in the saphenous nerve
was completely demyelinated 11-13 d after lysolecithin treatment, and
many remaining myelinated fibers had myelin of reduced thickness. This
was observed by light microscopy (Fig. 2a) and calculated from the
number of myelinated fibers or formerly myelinated fibers present in
each EM image (representing 292 µm2 of
the nerve). Lysolecithin-treated saphenous nerve (n = 4) contained 4.9 ± 0.9 myelinated axonal profiles per area
sampled (155 profiles over 33 images analyzed), and control nerve
(n = 4) contained 8.2 ± 1.7 profiles per area
sampled (261 myelinated axonal profiles over 32 images analyzed). After
topical application of lysolecithin, a similar degree of demyelination
was observed in the sciatic nerve as in the saphenous nerve (Fig.
2a). The g-ratios were calculated for the remaining
myelinated A-fibers in each nerve after treatment with lysolecithin.
The g-ratio was significantly increased in the demyelinated saphenous
nerve from 0.61 ± 0.01 in contralateral control nerves to
0.76 ± 0.01 in demyelinated nerves and similarly in the
demyelinated sciatic nerve from 0.56 ± 0.02 in contralateral control nerves to 0.81 ± 0.03 in demyelinated nerves (Fig.
2b), indicating a general decrease in myelin
thickness. There was no significant difference in the level of
myelination in sham-operated animals compared with control naive
animals.

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Figure 2.
Effects of lysolecithin treatment on the
myelination state of the saphenous and sciatic nerve.
a, Toluidine blue-stained resin sections (1 µm)
from the ipsilateral (i) and
contralateral (ii) saphenous nerves of
lysolecithin-treated animals on day 13 after treatment, ipsilateral
saphenous nerve of sham-treated animals on day 13 after treatment
(iii), ipsilateral (iv) and contralateral
(v) sciatic nerves of lysolecithin-treated
animals on day 13 after treatment, and ipsilateral sciatic nerve of
sham-treated animals (vi) on day 13 after
treatment were analyzed by light microscopy (n = 4 in each case). Contralateral nerves on day 13 after lysolecithin
treatment and nerves ipsilateral to sham treatment all appeared
to be morphologically normal with consistent levels of myelination
across the nerve. Scale bar, 10 µm. b, Quantification
of the degree of myelination of A-fibers after lysolecithin treatment
to the saphenous nerve was determined as a g-ratio from electron
microscope images of the ipsilateral and contralateral saphenous nerves
of lysolecithin-treated (i) and sham
animals (ii) on day 13 after, ipsilateral
and contralateral sciatic nerve of lysolecithin-treated
(iii) and sham animals
(iv) on day 13 after treatment (n = 4 in each case). Results are shown as the mean g-ratio of each fiber as
a function of the axon diameter (i-iv), and the data
are summarized as bar charts below (v). The data show a
general decrease in myelin thickness, i.e., increased g-ratio after
lysolecithin treatment but not after sham surgery. Statistical
significance (*p < 0.05) between conditions was
determined by Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA on ranks with an all
pair-wise multiple comparisons procedure (Dunn's method).
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Electron microscopy demonstrated that after lysolecithin treatment
unmyelinated C-fiber bundles appeared to be morphologically normal, and
fiber counts revealed no statistically significant change in the number
of unmyelinated C-fibers per EM image of either saphenous or sciatic nerve (Fig. 3a,b,
Table 1). Furthermore, the total number
of larger A-fiber axons that were either myelinated or demyelinated was
also unchanged in saphenous or sciatic nerve after lysolecithin (Fig.
3a,b, Table 1). Hence, there was no evidence that
treatment with lysolecithin under the conditions used in these
experiments affects the integrity of axons.

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Figure 3.
Effects of lysolecithin treatment on morphology of
saphenous and sciatic nerve fibers at the EM level. a,
Electron microscopy images of either the lysolecithin-treated saphenous
(i) or sciatic
(iii) nerves, compared with the
equivalent sham-operated nerves [saphenous
(ii) and sciatic (iv)
nerves] on day 13 after treatment (n = 4 in each
case). Thirteen days after lysolecithin treatment, ipsilateral nerves
display complete demyelination in ~40% of A-fibers with partial
demyelination of many remaining myelinated fibers. The images
demonstrate marked lysolecithin-induced reduction in the myelination of
A-fibers (arrow), whereas C-fibers (arrowhead) remain intact (5000×).
Scale bar, 2 µm. b, i and
ii show the mean number of C- and A-fibers recorded per
image area in different conditions. Unmyelinated axons were identified
as small-diameter fibers devoid of any myelin sheath (which were
present in bundles, surrounded by Schwann cell cytoplasm) and were
individually counted for all groups. A-fibers (with or without
lysolecithin treatment) were identified as the larger-diameter axons
with myelin sheaths or smaller-diameter thinly myelinated fibers or
occasionally those with no myelin that were solitary. Data for both
fiber types are presented as average numbers of fibers per 292 µm2 image ± SEM. A Kruskal-Wallis one-way
ANOVA on ranks showed no statistically significant differences between
treatment groups.
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Lysolecithin treatment induces ectopic firing in saphenous
afferents in the absence of changes in conduction velocity or
peripheral thresholds
At 3 and 5 d after lysolecithin treatment, reflex testing
showed no detectable change in either mechanically or thermally evoked
responses, indicating that a sensitized state had not yet developed.
Neither at this time nor at the time of peak behavioral change (11-13
d after treatment) was there any significant difference among normal,
sham, and demyelinated afferent fibers in the threshold for
their firing response to von Frey filaments or to thermal nociceptive
stimuli (Table 2). Thus there is no
evidence that changes in peripheral transduction mechanisms might be
responsible for the increased behavioral reflex sensitivity that was
observed (Table 2). The focal nature of this demyelination together
with the integrity of the axons was reflected in the normalrange of overall conduction velocities compared with sham and control nerves. The range included slow conduction velocities of <1
msec 1
up to the fastest in the range of 20 msec-1. Furthermore, the number of units
recorded for each conduction velocity did not differ significantly
among the lysolecithin-treated, sham, and naive nerves (Fig.
4a, Table 2). This provided
further support for the view that there had been no significant axon
damage.

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Figure 4.
Effects of lysolecithin treatment on
electrophysiological properties of saphenous afferents.
a, Afferent fiber units from the lysolecithin-treated
saphenous nerve of animals on days 11-13 after treatment
(n = 6) displayed a range of conduction velocities
that were not significantly different from those of fibers from naive
nerves (n = 4). The range included slow conduction
velocities of <1 msec 1 up to
the fastest in the range of 20 msec-1. The number
of units recorded for each conduction velocity did not differ
significantly among the lysolecithin-treated (black column), naive
(white column), and sham (gray column) nerves. b,
Electrophysiological recordings of saphenous afferent fiber unit
activity 11, 12, and 13 d after lysolecithin treatment to the
saphenous nerve (n = 6), 11-13 d after sham
treatment (n = 4), and in naive animals
(n = 4). Spontaneous activity in saphenous
afferents was recorded with a frequency of 2-3 Hz. Examples of
electrophysiological recordings of naive (i),
sham-treated (ii), and lysolecithin-treated
(iii) nerves are displayed.
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A common feature of lysolecithin-demyelinated nerves over a range of
11-13 d after application, however, has been the presence of a
spontaneous low-frequency discharge (2-3 impulses per second), reminiscent of a similar discharge that we have observed in the sciatic
nerve of Prx-null mice (Gillespie et al., 2000 ) (Fig. 4b).
Expression of NF-200, peripherin, and the axonal damage marker ATF3
in DRG is unaffected by lysolecithin treatment
To assess the integrity of the cell bodies 13 d after
lysolecithin treatment of the saphenous or sciatic nerve, we analyzed the expression of NF-200, which labels the larger-diameter, myelinated DRG cell population (Lawson and Waddell, 1991 ; Michael et al., 1999 ),
and peripherin, a type III intermediate filament protein, which is
normally expressed selectively by unmyelinated sensory neurons (Amaya
et al., 2000 ). No significant difference was observed in the number of
either NF-200 or peripherin-positive DRG neurons ipsilateral to
lysolecithin compared with contralateral or sham treatment of the
sciatic or saphenous nerve (Table 3).
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Table 3.
Immunohistochemical assessment of structural markers and
the neuropeptide CGRP in DRG cells after lysolecithin treatment
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We also analyzed the expression of ATF3, a member of the ATF/cAMP
response element-binding protein (ATF/CREB) family (Hai et al., 1999 ),
which is induced in DRG neurons after peripheral nerve injury and thus
considered to be a nerve injury marker, identifying axotomized neurons
(Tsujino et al., 2000 ). As a positive control, we analyzed the
expression of ATF3 in the DRG of mice, which were at the peak of
neuropathic sensitization after chronic constriction injury (CCI) to
the sciatic nerve. In CCI mice we found expression of ATF3 in 69 ± 16% of ipsilateral DRG neurons. Under control (sham) conditions we
found a very small number of ATF3-positive cells, all of which were
also positive for NF-200. However, there was no significant increase in
the proportion of ATF3-immunopositive cells in the DRG
ipsilateral to lysolecithin treatment of
the sciatic nerve as compared with contralateral or sham-treated
animals (Fig. 5a, Table
4).

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Figure 5.
Immunohistochemical colocalization of neuronal
subtype markers with ATF3, NPY, and the sodium channel subtypes
Nav1.8 and Nav1.3 in DRG cells after
lysolecithin treatment of the sciatic nerve. a,
Expression of ATF3 in ipsilateral and contralateral DRG sections from
lysolecithin-treated animals on day 13 after treatment
(n = 4). There was no significant increase in
expression of ATF3 from that seen in control DRG after lysolecithin
treatment or sham treatment. The statistical significance
(*p < 0.05) of any difference was determined by a
Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA on ranks with all pair-wise multiple
comparison procedures (Dunn's method). Images show nuclei of
ATF3-immunopositive cells labeled with FITC (green) and
NF-200-immunopositive cells labeled with TRITC (red), in ipsilateral
(i) and contralateral (ii) DRG
from lysolecithin-treated animals and ipsilateral DRG
(iii) from CCI animals. Scale bar, 20 µm.
b, Expression of the neuropeptide NPY in ipsilateral and
contralateral DRG sections from lysolecithin-treated animals at 13 d after treatment (n = 4). Images show
NF-200-immunopositive cells labeled with TRITC (red) and
NF-200/NPY-colocalized, immunopositive cells labeled with FITC (green)
in DRG ipsilateral to lysolecithin treatment (i)
as opposed to no positive cells in DRG contralateral to lysolecithin
treatment (ii). Scale bar, 20 µm. c,
The expression of the Nav1.8 channel in ipsilateral and
contralateral DRG sections from lysolecithin-treated animals on day 13 after treatment (n = 4). After lysolecithin
treatment of the sciatic nerve, there was a decrease in the number of
cells expressing Nav1.8 in ipsilateral DRG compared with
contralateral DRG, all of which were immunopositive for NF-200. There
was no significant decrease in expression after sham treatment. The
statistical significance (*p < 0.05) of any
difference was determined by a Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA on ranks
with all pair-wise multiple comparison procedures (Dunn's method).
Images show Nav1.8-immunopositive cells labeled with FITC
(green) and NF-200-immunopositive cells labeled with TRITC (red), with
coexpression appearing yellow in ipsilateral (i)
and contralateral (ii) DRG from lysolecithin-treated
animals. Scale bar, 20 µm. d, Expression of the
Nav1.3 channel in ipsilateral and contralateral DRG
sections from lysolecithin-treated animals 13 d after treatment
and sham-treated animals on the same day after treatment
(n = 4 in each case). Images show
NF-200-immunopositive cells labeled with TRITC (red) and
Nav1.3-immunopositive cells labeled with FITC (green) with
coexpression appearing yellow in DRG ipsilateral to lysolecithin
treatment (i) as opposed to no positive cells in
DRG contralateral to lysolecithin treatment (ii). Scale
bar, 20 µm.
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Table 4.
Immunohistochemical assessment of ATF3, the neuropeptide
NPY, and the sodium channel subtypes Nav1.8 and
Nav1.3 in sciatic nerve DRG cells after lysolecithin
treatment
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Lysolecithin treatment causes a distinctive pattern of neuropeptide
expression in sensory neurons
After traumatic injury to the peripheral nerve, there are a number
of neurochemical and morphological changes, both in peripheral nerve
fibers and centrally in the spinal cord (Dray et al., 1994 ; Hokfelt et
al., 1994 ), that can contribute to the altered sensory transmission
associated with chronic pain states. Phenotypic changes occur in many
primary afferent DRG neurons, resulting in the altered expression of
neuropeptides including CGRP, galanin, and NPY (Villar et al., 1991 ;
Hokfelt et al., 1994 ). We therefore investigated whether such changes
occur in the demyelination-induced pain state to compare the changes
with those occurring in other models of neuropathic pain in which
axonal damage is a major factor. CGRP is normally expressed by
approximately one-half of unmyelinated DRG neurons as well as one-fifth
of those with A myelinated neurons (Rosenfeld et al., 1983 ; Gibson
et al., 1984 ; McCarthy and Lawson, 1990 ; Hokfelt et al., 1994 ) and is
downregulated after peripheral nerve injury such as axotomy and CCI
(Noguchi et al., 1990 ; Dumoulin et al., 1992 ). However, there was no
significant difference in the numbers of ipsilateral versus
contralateral DRG cells expressing immunoreactive CGRP after
lysolecithin treatment or sham treatment of one sciatic nerve or of one
saphenous nerve (Table 3), suggesting that lysolecithin treatment
caused no extensive damage to the axons of CGRP-expressing cells.
Further immunohistochemical investigations were restricted to the
sciatic model of lysolecithin-induced demyelination, because it is a
larger nerve and would contribute a larger proportion of cell bodies in
relevant DRGs, thereby facilitating detection of changes.
Galanin is normally expressed at very low levels in sensory and
sympathetic neurons. However, after peripheral nerve lesions, it is
strongly upregulated mainly in small and medium-sized neurons (Hokfelt
et al., 1987 ; Villar et al., 1989 ), especially those that normally
contain substance P and CGRP (Xu et al., 1990 ; Doughty et al., 1991 ;
Kashiba et al., 1992 ), the majority of which are unmyelinated. However,
we observed no significant galanin immunoreactivity in DRG cells
ipsilateral or contralateral to focal demyelination of one sciatic
nerve. As a positive control to test the specificity of the antibody,
we used DRG from mice at peak neuropathic sensitization after sciatic
CCI (Garry et al., 2003 ). These sections showed a significant
proportion of mainly small diameter cells positive for galanin
(ipsilateral 9.3 ± 2.4 cells per section; contralateral 0),
verifying that the antibody could successfully detect the presence of
galanin when expressed after traumatic nerve injury and that there is,
in contrast, no significant upregulation after lysolecithin treatment.
NPY is not normally expressed in DRG cells (Lundberg et al.,
1983 ). However, the expression of NPY is strongly upregulated in DRG
neurons after axotomy (Wakisaka et al., 1991 , 1992 ; Noguchi et al.,
1993 ; Kashiba et al., 1994 ), partial sciatic injury (Ma and Bisby,
1998 ), CCI of the sciatic nerve (Nahin et al., 1994 ; Munglani et al.,
1995 ), and streptozotocin-induced diabetic neuropathy (Rittenhouse et
al., 1996 ). This upregulation occurs mainly in large primary sensory
neurons containing NF-200 (Kashiba et al., 1994 ; Marchand et al.,
1999 ). We also observed significant NPY immunoreactivity in ~16%
cells after demyelination of one sciatic nerve (185 NPY-positive cells
from 1164 NF-200-positive cells counted over 26 sections;
n = 4) as opposed to no detectable immunoreactivity in
contralateral or sham nerves (Table 4). All NPY-immunopositive cells
were also immunoreactive for NF-200, indicating that they were cells
with myelinated fibers (Fig. 5b).
Afferent expression of NaV1.8 and NaV1.3 is
altered by lysolecithin treatment
Normally, DRG neurons express a complex repertoire of sodium
channel transcripts (Waxman et al., 1999 ) distinguished by their differential sensitivity to tetrodotoxin (TTX) (Black and Waxman, 1996 ). The TTX-resistant sodium channel NaV1.8 is
expressed in ~50% of small-diameter, unmyelinated DRG cells (Amaya
et al., 2000 ) and in ~20% of medium- to large-diameter, myelinated
DRG cells. Our results from the DRG of contralateral untreated nerve confirm that result, showing expression of NaV1.8
in 1078 of the 2130 (51%) peripherin-immunopositive cells (C-fibers)
and 500 of the 2086 (24%) NF-200-immunopositive cells (myelinated
fibers). Likewise, in sham controls we saw Nav1.8
expressed in 51% of peripherin-immunopositive cells ipsilaterally and
48% contralaterally and in 23% of NF-200-immunopositive cells
ipsilaterally and 22% contralaterally. It has been shown previously
that after axotomy, CCI, or spinal nerve ligation, expression of
Nav1.8 is downregulated in neurons in the DRG, a change that has been proposed to contribute to the production of a
neuropathic pain state (Dib-Hajj et al., 1999 ; Waxman, 1999 ; Decosterd
et al., 2002 ). In the L4, L5, and L6 DRG taken from animals 13 d
after lysolecithin treatment to the sciatic nerve, there was a
34.1 ± 4.2% reduction of Nav1.8 expression
in the ipsilateral DRG (62.4 ± 3.4 NaV1.8-immunopositive cells per section) versus
the contralateral and sham DRG (with corresponding values of 94.7 ± 4.7 NaV1.8 and 95.7 ± 6.0, respectively). To address the question of whether these changes in
sodium channel expression were restricted to a subset of neurons, we
performed dual labeling experiments to reveal the colocalization of
Nav1.8 with NF-200/peripherin. The reduction in
Nav1.8 expression appeared to be restricted to NF-200-immunopositive cells, i.e., those presumed to have formerly myelinated axons (Fig. 5c, Table 4). No change in the number of cells coexpressing Nav1.8 and NF-200 was
observed between the ipsilateral or contralateral DRG of sham control
animals, and we found no decrease in the proportion of
peripherin-immunoreactive cells expressing Nav1.8
after lysolecithin treatment (Table 4).
The Nav1.3 channel is normally found in DRG only
during development, and consistent with this we could not detect
expression of this channel in the DRG before treatment (Fig.
5d, Table 4). However, expression of this channel has been
reported to increase in sensory neurons after axotomy (Black et al.,
1999 ), CCI, and spinal nerve ligation (Kim et al., 2001 ). After
lysolecithin-induced demyelination of the sciatic nerve, we found a
significant increase in the number of NF-200-immunoreactive cells per
ipsilateral DRG that now expressed Nav1.3
(18.5 ± 2.4%) (Fig. 5d, Table 4). No Nav1.3 positive cells were also immunopositive
for peripherin, showing that expression of the channel was not
increased in C-fibers, and no Nav1.3
immunoreactivity was detected in contralateral or sham tissue.
Lysolecithin treatment causes NMDA receptor-dependent central
sensitization that can be reversed by cannabinoids
Sensitization of cells in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord is a
key change in other neuropathic pain states that is thought to involve
activation of the NMDA receptor (Wilcox, 1991 ; Codderre and Melzack,
1992 ; Chaplan et al., 1997 ). We found that spinal NMDA receptors also
play a role in the mechanical allodynia seen in animals with focal
demyelination of the saphenous nerve, because behavioral sensitization
was reversed after spinal administration of the selective NMDA receptor
antagonist (R)-CPP (Lehmann et al., 1987 ) (Fig.
6a). This parallels
observations that we made previously in a demyelination model based on
the periaxin-null mouse (Gillespie et al., 2000 ).
Similarly, the reduction in thermal nociceptive response latency
ipsilateral to lysolecithin treatment was reversed by
(R)-CPP (Fig. 6e). There was no effect of
(R)-CPP on thermal or mechanical responses
contralateral to demyelination. Equivalent injections of the saline
vehicle had no effect on mechanical or thermal reflex responses either
ipsilateral or contralateral to lysolecithin (data not shown;
n = 4).

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Figure 6.
Effects of intrathecal administration of NMDA and
cannabinoid receptor-targeting agents on sensitized behavioral reflex
responses after lysolecithin treatment. Paw withdrawal thresholds in
response to cutaneous mechanical stimulation with von Frey filaments
(a-d) and paw withdrawal latencies in
response to cutaneous noxious thermal stimulation
(e-h) were measured in animals at peak
behavioral reflex sensitivity after topical application of lysolecithin
to one saphenous nerve. Ipsilateral ( ) and contralateral ( )
values are displayed before and after intrathecal administration of
each pharmacological agent as paw withdrawal threshold in milliNewtons
per millimeter squared (mN/mm2) for
mechanical stimulation or paw withdrawal latency (seconds) for thermal
stimulation. For all measurements, each value is the mean ± SEM,
and statistical significance (*p < 0.05) of any
differences between postinjection threshold values and preinjection
baseline values was determined by a one-way repeated measures ANOVA
with Dunnet's post hoc analysis. a,
e, The NMDA receptor antagonist
(R)-CPP (100 pmol) reversed the behavioral reflex
sensitivity to mechanical stimulation (a) and
thermal stimulation (e) in lysolecithin-treated
animals for up to 65-70 min after intrathecal application
(n = 8). b, f, The
mixed CB1/CB2 cannabinoid receptor
agonist WIN 55,212-2 (60 pmol) significantly reversed the behavioral
reflex sensitivity to mechanical stimulation (b)
and thermal stimulation (f) in
lysolecithin-treated animals (n = 7) for up to
55-60 min after intrathecal application. c,
g, When injected in combination, WIN 55,212-2 and AM
251 produced no significant effect on the behavioral reflex sensitivity
to mechanical stimulation (c) and thermal
stimulation (g) in lysolecithin-treated animals
(n = 8). d, h, The
CB1 receptor antagonist AM 251 (100 pmol) resulted in no
change in the behavioral reflex sensitivity to mechanical stimulation
(d) and thermal stimulation
(h) in lysolecithin-treated animals
(n = 7).
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Because neuropathic pain states often show a relative
insensitivity to spinal opioid analgesia compared with acute or
peripheral inflammatory pain states (Arner and Meyerson, 1988 ;
Fleetwood-Walker et al., 1988 ; Yaksh and Harty, 1988 ), we
assessed the effect of the potent and selective µ-opioid receptor
agonist DAMGO in the lysolecithin model. Spinal µ-opioid receptors
exert powerful analgesic effects in inflammatory models of
chronic pain (Malmberg and Yaksh, 1993 ; Chaplan et al., 1997 ). At the
highest dose of intrathecal DAMGO that could be administered before
overt psychomotor incoordination was seen (10 pmol/10 µl),
there was no specific reversal of the mechanical allodynia or
thermal hyperalgesia seen ipsilateral to lysolecithin treatment (data
not shown; n = 4). The same intrathecal dose of DAMGO
produces significant analgesia in tail pressure and thermal paw
withdrawal tests in mice (Sakurada et al., 1999 , 2001 ).
An alternative spinal modulatory system that can exert selective
antinociceptive effects in both neuropathic and inflammatory hyperalgesia is the endogenous cannabinoid system (Herzberg et al.,
1997 ; Richardson et al., 1998a ; Fox et al., 2001 ). This is of
particular interest because there is evidence that cannabinoids may
exert analgesic and additional beneficial effects in demyelinating diseases such as multiple sclerosis (Consroe et al., 1997 ; Williamson and Evans, 2000 ; Robson, 2001 ). In this animal model of peripheral nerve demyelination, spinal administration of the cannabinoid receptor
agonist WIN 55,212-2 attenuated the sensitization [that is the
reduction in mechanical nociceptive thresholds (Fig. 6b) and
thermal reflex latencies (Fig. 6f)] that was
displayed ipsilateral to lysolecithin. In both cases, changes were
limited to the lysolecithin-treated side and were statistically
significant up to ~1 hr after injection. The
CB1 receptor in particular is implicated, because
spinal administration of the selective CB1
receptor antagonist AM 251 reversed the effects of WIN 55,212-2 on
mechanical sensitization (Fig. 6c) and thermal sensitization
(Fig. 6g). However, when administered alone, AM 251 had no significant effect, indicating that endogenous spinal CB1 receptors had not become tonically activated
as a result of the lysolecithin treatment (Fig.
6d,h).
 |
Discussion |
Abnormal sensory phenomena including spontaneous pain,
hyperalgesia, and allodynia are associated with human peripheral
demyelinating neuropathies such as types of CMT and GBS. In CMT,
although sensory deficits are usually less severe than motor problems,
pain is a problem in many sufferers and is a clear aspect of the
clinical picture in CMT4F (Carter et al., 1998 ; Boerkoel et al., 2001 ; Guilbot et al., 2001 ; Takashima et al., 2002 ). Similarly, GBS or acute
inflammatory polyneuropathy may involve pain in 54-84% of cases
(Asbury, 1990 ; Moulin, 1998 ). Because the mechanisms underlying
neuropathic pain in demyelinating disease are poorly understood
(Rasminsky, 1981 ), we developed and characterized an animal model of
focal peripheral nerve demyelination.
Morphology of the demyelinated nerve
To understand the mechanisms underlying demyelination-induced
neuropathic pain, it is important to establish whether axonopathic changes may contribute. The protocol used here results in demyelination of rapid onset confined to the immediate vicinity of the site of
injection, causing little damage to the Schwann cell cytoplasm (Love et
al., 1986 ) or the axon (Figs. 2, 3). However, because small-diameter
fibers may be damaged by lysolecithin injection into the nerve
(Mitchell and Caren, 1982 ), we applied lysolecithin topically to the
saphenous or sciatic nerve, producing a focal demyelination without
detectable axon damage or loss as assessed by light and electron
microscopy. Correspondingly, in immunohistochemical studies we found
neither loss of neuronal somata in the DRG, which were positive for
NF-200 or peripherin, nor increased expression of the neuronal injury
marker ATF3. This model of peripheral nerve demyelination appears to
involve neither axonopathy nor cell loss and in that sense is less
severe than models of neuropathic pain such as axotomy, CCI, and spinal
nerve ligation (SNL), which involve axonal injury.
Demyelination-induced allodynia and hyperalgesia: the role of
functional changes in peripheral nerve
Damage to sensory nerves as a result of human peripheral
demyelinating disease has been linked to pain and heightened
sensitivity to touch (Pentland and Donald, 1994 ; Devor and Seltzer,
1999 ). After lysolecithin treatment of either the mixed sciatic nerve or the sensory saphenous nerve, we have demonstrated, for the first
time, the development of mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia.
Peripheral sensitization may contribute to neuropathic pain behavior in
other models (Koltzenburg, 1998 ; Woolf and Costigan, 1999 ), but in the
demyelination model we could find no significant changes in the
cutaneous threshold for action potential generation by mechanical or
thermal nociceptive stimuli in either A- or C-fibers. Some forms of
mechanical allodynia are considered to be mediated by myelinated
A-fibers providing inputs that are inappropriately processed by
sensitized dorsal horn neurons (Woolf, 1997 ; Koltzenburg, 1998 ).
Indeed, in the conditions that occur after section of peripheral or
spinal nerves (for example, with phenotypic changes in DRG cells),
spontaneous, ectopic activity in A, but not C afferents may play a role
in the induction of neuropathic pain behaviors (C. N. Liu et al.,
2000 ; X. Liu et al., 2000 ). Such activity may be important in the
development of neuropathic pain here because repetitive ectopic firing
may underlie abnormal sensation in diseases involving segmental
demyelination, particularly where axonopathic changes are lacking
(Rasminsky, 1981 ). The presence of low-frequency spontaneous discharge
in demyelinated saphenous nerve corresponded to times of peak
behavioral reflex sensitivity and was similar to observations in the
Prx-null mouse (Gillespie et al., 2000 ). Because
inflammatory neuritis can lead to a sensitized neuropathic pain state
(Eliav et al., 1999 ), the possibility should be considered that a
neuroimmune response could contribute to generating the allodynia and
hyperalgesia observed here. However, in the Prx-null mouse,
an alternative model of demyelination-induced neuropathic pain, minimal
evidence could be found for macrophage infiltration of the degenerating
structures (Gillespie et al., 2000 ), suggesting that demyelination per
se is a critical factor in generating the neuropathic pain state.
Phenotypic changes in the DRG
After peripheral nerve lesions, changes in the expression of
peptides occur in primary sensory neurons that may contribute to
mediating central sensitization (Hokfelt et al., 1994 ). We assessed
whether changes in the lysolecithin model are similar to those in other
models of neuropathic pain, such as the downregulation of CGRP and the
upregulation of galanin and NPY. Because this model appears to cause
morphological and functional changes only in myelinated afferents, we
asked whether changes in peptide expression are similarly restricted.
Alterations in CGRP and galanin expression (generally in small-diameter
afferents) have been implicated in the development of neuropathic pain
(Hokfelt et al., 1987 ; Villar et al., 1989 ; Dumoulin et al., 1992 ; Kerr
et al., 2000 ; Wynick et al., 2001 ), but we saw no change in these
peptides after peripheral nerve demyelination.
We did find, however, upregulated expression of NPY, restricted to
large NF-200-positive cells ipsilateral to focal demyelination. This
parallels changes seen in other models of neuropathic pain. Notably,
the upregulation of NPY occurred without any alteration in the
expression of ATF3, indicating that direct neuronal injury was not
responsible for the effect. After axotomy (Waxman et al., 1994 ), CCI
(Dib-Hajj et al., 1999 ), and SNL (Kim et al., 2001 ), changes are seen
in the expression of sodium channel isoforms, leading to functional
changes in afferent sodium currents. For example,
Nav1.8 [expressed preferentially in small- and
medium-diameter DRG and implicated in pathological pain states (Akopian
et al., 1996 ; Sangameswaran et al., 1996 ; Novakovic et al., 1998 )], is downregulated (Dib-Hajj et al., 1996 ; Waxman, 1999 ), whereas
Nav1.3 (normally found only in the DRG during
development) is upregulated (Waxman et al., 1994 ; Waxman, 1999 ). We
found a similar decrease in the expression of
Nav1.8 channels in the DRG after focal
demyelination that was restricted to formerly myelinated cells. In
contrast, Nav1.3 was upregulated in corresponding
cells. This further supports the specificity of A-fiber changes in
evoking neuropathic pain after demyelination. Changes in channel type
and distribution could contribute to hyperexcitability and ectopic
pacemaker activity (Matzner and Devor, 1992 , 1994 ; Devor et al., 1994 ;
Cummins and Waxman, 1997 ; Omana-Zapata et al., 1997 ; Waxman, 1999 ).
Na+ channel-blocking agents may be
effective analgesics not only in nerve injury-induced neuropathic pain
(Chabal et al., 1992 ; Devor et al., 1992 ; Omana-Zapata et al., 1997 ;
Rizzo, 1997 ), but also in demyelination-induced pain.
Central changes after afferent demyelination and central modulation
of sensitization
Afferent hyperexcitability and ectopic firing after lysolecithin
treatment provide a basis for the ongoing input that brings about
central sensitization. Because a spinal NMDA antagonist reverses
sensitization in lysolecithin-treated mice, central changes play a
critical role in the phenotype. NMDA receptors are similarly important
in the mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia of other chronic
pain models (Dickenson and Sullivan, 1987 ; Mao et al., 1993 ; Bennett,
1994 ; Chaplan et al., 1997 ; Woolf and Costigan, 1999 ). The relative
insensitivity of neuropathic pain models to spinally administered
opioid analgesics (Arner and Meyerson, 1988 ; Yaksh and Harty, 1988 ; Lee
et al., 1995 ) also corresponds to our findings in the lysolecithin
demyelination model.
Cannabinoid receptor drugs may represent an alternative strategy for
the relief of chronic pain. Spinal cannabinoids can effectively modulate nociception (Herzberg et al., 1997 ; Richardson et al., 1998a ;
Martin et al., 1999 ; Bridges et al., 2001 ; Fox et al., 2001 ; Kelly and
Chaplan, 2001 ), and the majority of these analgesic effects appear to
be CB1 receptor-mediated (Richardson et al., 1998b ). In line with experiments on nerve-injury pain (Herzberg et
al., 1997 ; Bridges et al., 2001 ; Fox et al., 2001 ), we found that
intrathecal administration of the mixed CB receptor agonist WIN
55,212-2 attenuated mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia in
lysolecithin-treated mice. This effect was reversed by the CB1 antagonist AM 251, although AM 251 had little
effect alone. It is possible that additional, noncannabinoid side
effects of the compounds may occur in the immediate vicinity of the
intrathecal injections where the local concentrations are higher, but
the most likely explanation is that the WIN 55,212-2-induced,
AM-251-reversed analgesia is mediated by CB1
receptors. The efficacy of cannabinoids in the treatment of neuropathic
pain may be linked to their actions on myelinated A-fibers. Under
normal conditions, spinal cannabinoid receptors may predominantly
regulate C-fiber input to the spinal cord, but after nerve injury these
effects may be lost, whereas inhibitory influences on A -fiber inputs
are retained (Chapman, 2001 ). This might result in cannabinoid agonists
causing a reduction of mechanical allodynia, with more limited effect
on thermal hyperalgesia, consistent with evidence from a number of
studies (Herzberg et al., 1997 ; Bridges et al., 2001 ; Fox et al.,
2001 ). In the present model, in which C-fiber primary afferents appear
to be unaffected, both mechanical (A-fiber) and thermal (C-fiber)
inputs should be targeted effectively by cannabinoids, as observed
experimentally. These findings point further to the potential use of
cannabinoids as therapeutic agents in human demyelinating neuropathies.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Nov. 21, 2002; revised Jan. 22, 2003; accepted Jan. 29, 2003.
This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust (S.F.W., P.J.B.). We
thank the Medical Research Council for the award of a Studentship (V.C.J.W.). We thank staff at the Wellcome Animal Research Unit for
animal husbandry and R. Mitchell and M. Koltzenburg for helpful suggestions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. S. M. Fleetwood-Walker,
Division of Preclinical Veterinary Sciences, University of Edinburgh,
Summerhall, Edinburgh EH9 1QH, UK. E-mail
s.m.fleetwood-walker{at}ed.ac.uk.
 |
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V. C. J. Wallace, J. Blackbeard, A. R. Segerdahl, F. Hasnie, T. Pheby, S. B. McMahon, and A. S. C. Rice
Characterization of rodent models of HIV-gp120 and anti-retroviral-associated neuropathic pain
Brain,
October 1, 2007;
130(10):
2688 - 2702.
[Abstract]
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F. S. Hasnie, V. C. J. Wallace, K. Hefner, A. Holmes, and A. S. C. Rice
Mechanical and cold hypersensitivity in nerve-injured C57BL/6J mice is not associated with fear-avoidance- and depression-related behaviour
Br. J. Anaesth.,
June 1, 2007;
98(6):
816 - 822.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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C. Liu and J. M. Walker
Effects of a Cannabinoid Agonist on Spinal Nociceptive Neurons in a Rodent Model of Neuropathic Pain
J Neurophysiol,
December 1, 2006;
96(6):
2984 - 2994.
[Abstract]
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R.-R. Ji and G. Strichartz
Cell Signaling and the Genesis of Neuropathic Pain
Sci. Signal.,
September 28, 2004;
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re14 - re14.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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N. Ninkina, K. Papachroni, D. C. Robertson, O. Schmidt, L. Delaney, F. O'Neill, F. Court, A. Rosenthal, S. M. Fleetwood-Walker, A. M. Davies, et al.
Neurons Expressing the Highest Levels of {gamma}-Synuclein Are Unaffected by Targeted Inactivation of the Gene
Mol. Cell. Biol.,
November 15, 2003;
23(22):
8233 - 8245.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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