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Publication : Oligodendrocyte ablation triggers central pain independently of innate or adaptive immune responses in mice.

First Author  Gritsch S Year  2014
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  5
Pages  5472 PubMed ID  25434649
Mgi Jnum  J:225703 Mgi Id  MGI:5694041
Doi  10.1038/ncomms6472 Citation  Gritsch S, et al. (2014) Oligodendrocyte ablation triggers central pain independently of innate or adaptive immune responses in mice. Nat Commun 5:5472
abstractText  Mechanisms underlying central neuropathic pain are poorly understood. Although glial dysfunction has been functionally linked with neuropathic pain, very little is known about modulation of pain by oligodendrocytes. Here we report that genetic ablation of oligodendrocytes rapidly triggers a pattern of sensory changes that closely resemble central neuropathic pain, which are manifest before overt demyelination. Primary oligodendrocyte loss is not associated with autoreactive T- and B-cell infiltration in the spinal cord and neither activation of microglia nor reactive astrogliosis contribute functionally to central pain evoked by ablation of oligodendrocytes. Instead, light and electron microscopic analyses reveal axonal pathology in the spinal dorsal horn and spinothalamic tract concurrent with the induction and maintenance of nociceptive hypersensitivity. These data reveal a role for oligodendrocytes in modulating pain and suggest that perturbation of oligodendrocyte functions that maintain axonal integrity can lead to central neuropathic pain independent of immune contributions.
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