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[Preprint]. 2023 Jun 9:2023.06.08.544200. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.06.08.544200

Tonic Meningeal Interleukin-10 Upregulates Delta Opioid Receptor to Prevent Relapse to Pain

Kufreobong E Inyang, Jaewon Sim, Kimberly B Clark, Geron Matan, Karli Monahan, Christine Evans, Po Beng, Jiacheng “Vicky” Ma, Cobi J Heijnen, Robert Dantzer, Gregory Scherrer, Annemieke Kavelaars, Matthew Bernard, Yasser Aldhamen, Joseph K Folger, Geoffroy Laumet
PMCID: PMC10274865  PMID: 37333074

Abstract

Chronic pain often alternates between transient remission and relapse of severe pain. While most research on chronic pain has focused on mechanisms maintaining pain, there is a critical unmet need to understand what prevents pain from re-emerging in those who recover from acute pain. We found that interleukin (IL)-10, a pain resolving cytokine, is persistently produced by resident macrophages in the spinal meninges during remission from pain. IL-10 upregulated expression and analgesic activity of δ-opioid receptor (δOR) in the dorsal root ganglion. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of IL-10 signaling or δOR triggered relapse to pain in both sexes. These data challenge the widespread assumption that remission of pain is simply a return to the naïve state before pain was induced. Instead, our findings strongly suggest a novel concept that: remission is a state of lasting pain vulnerability that results from a long-lasting neuroimmune interactions in the nociceptive system.

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