Sustained Elevated Adenosine via ADORA2B Promotes Chronic Pain through Neuro-immune Interaction
Author(s) -
Xia Hu,
Morayo G. Adebiyi,
Jialie Luo,
Kaiqi Sun,
Thanh-Thuy T. Le,
Yujin Zhang,
Hongyu Wu,
Shushan Zhao,
Harry KarmoutyQuintana,
Hong Liu,
Aji Huang,
Y. Edward Wen,
Oleg Zaika,
Mykola Mamenko,
Oleh Pochynyuk,
Rodney E. Kellems,
Holger K. Eltzschig,
Michael R. Blackburn,
Edgar T. Walters,
Dong Huang,
Hongzhen Hu,
Yang Xia
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.05.080
Subject(s) - adenosine , chronic pain , adenosine deaminase , adenosine kinase , adenosine receptor , medicine , immune system , purinergic signalling , nociceptor , pharmacology , adenosine a1 receptor , immunology , receptor , neuroscience , nociception , biology , agonist , psychiatry
The molecular mechanisms of chronic pain are poorly understood and effective mechanism-based treatments are lacking. Here, we report that mice lacking adenosine deaminase (ADA), an enzyme necessary for the breakdown of adenosine, displayed unexpected chronic mechanical and thermal hypersensitivity due to sustained elevated circulating adenosine. Extending from Ada(-/-) mice, we further discovered that prolonged elevated adenosine contributed to chronic pain behaviors in two additional independent animal models: sickle cell disease mice, a model of severe pain with limited treatment, and complete Freund's adjuvant paw-injected mice, a well-accepted inflammatory model of chronic pain. Mechanistically, we revealed that activation of adenosine A2B receptors on myeloid cells caused nociceptor hyperexcitability and promoted chronic pain via soluble IL-6 receptor trans-signaling, and our findings determined that prolonged accumulated circulating adenosine contributes to chronic pain by promoting immune-neuronal interaction and revealed multiple therapeutic targets.
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