Neuropathic and inflammatory pain promote a large number of persisting adaptations at the cellular and molecular level, allowing tissue or nerve damage, even if only transient, to elicit changes in cells that contribute to the development of chronic pain and associated symptoms. There is evidence that injury-induced changes in chromatin structure drive stable changes in gene expression and neural function, which may cause several symptoms, including allodynia, hyperalgesia, anxiety, and depression. Recent findings on epigenetic changes in the spinal cord and brain during chronic pain may guide fundamental advances in new treatments. In this review, we provide a brief overview of epigenetic regulation in the nervous system and then discuss the still-limited literature that directly implicates epigenetic modifications in chronic pain syndromes.
A multiplex analysis for profiling the expression of candidate genes along with epigenetic modification may lead to a better understanding of the complex machinery of neuropathic pain. In the present study, we found that partial sciatic nerve ligation most remarkably increased the expression of monocyte chemotactic protein 3 (MCP-3, known as CCL7) a total of 33 541 genes in the spinal cord, which lasted for 4 weeks. This increase in MCP-3 gene transcription was accompanied by the decreased trimethylation of histone H3 at Lys27 at the MCP-3 promoter. The increased MCP-3 expression associated with its epigenetic modification observed in the spinal cord was almost abolished in interleukin 6 knockout mice with partial sciatic nerve ligation. Consistent with these findings, a single intrathecal injection of recombinant proteins of interleukin 6 significantly increased MCP-3 messenger RNA with a decrease in the level of Lys27 trimethylation of histone H3 at the MCP-3 promoter in the spinal cord of mice. Furthermore, deletion of the C-C chemokine receptor type 2 (CCR2) gene, which encodes a receptor for MCP-3, failed to affect the acceleration of MCP-3 expression in the spinal cord after partial sciatic nerve ligation. A robust increase in MCP-3 protein, which lasted for up to 2 weeks after surgery, in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord of mice with partial sciatic nerve ligation was seen mostly in astrocytes, but not microglia or neurons. On the other hand, the increases in both microglia and astrocytes in the spinal cord by partial sciatic nerve ligation were mostly abolished in interleukin 6 knockout mice. Moreover, this increase in microglia was almost abolished by CCR2 gene deletion, whereas the increase in astrocytes was not affected in nerve-ligated mice that lacked the CCR2 gene. We also found that either in vivo or in vitro treatment with MCP-3 caused robust microglia activation. Under these conditions, intrathecal administration of MCP-3 antibody suppressed the increase in microglia within the mouse spinal cord and neuropathic pain-like behaviours after nerve injury. With the use of a functional magnetic resonance imaging analysis, we demonstrated that a single intrathecal injection of MCP-3 induced dramatic increases in signal intensity in pain-related brain regions. These findings suggest that increased MCP-3 expression associated with interleukin 6 dependent epigenetic modification at the MCP-3 promoter after nerve injury, mostly in spinal astrocytes, may serve to facilitate astrocyte-microglia interaction in the spinal cord and could play a critical role in the neuropathic pain-like state.
Environmental enrichment is an experimental paradigm that increases brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) gene expression accompanied by neurogenesis in the hippocampus of rodents. In the present study, we investigated whether an enriched environment could cause epigenetic modification at the BDNF gene in the hippocampus of mice. Exposure to an enriched environment for 3-4 weeks caused a dramatic increase in the mRNA expression of BDNF, but not platelet-derived growth factor A (PDGF-A), PDGF-B, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), nerve growth factor (NGF), epidermal growth factor (EGF), or glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), in the hippocampus of mice. Under these conditions, exposure to an enriched environment induced a significant increase in histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4) trimethylation at the BDNF P3 and P6 promoters, in contrast to significant decreases in histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9) trimethylation at the BDNF P4 promoter and histone H3 lysine 27 (H3K27) trimethylation at the BDNF P3 and P4 promoters without any changes in the expression of their associated histone methylases and demethylases in the hippocampus. The expression levels of several microRNAs in the hippocampus were not changed by an enriched environment. These results suggest that an enriched environment increases BDNF mRNA expression via sustained epigenetic modification in the mouse hippocampus.
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