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[Preprint]. 2025 Oct 1:2025.09.30.679489. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2025.09.30.679489

Injured SSTR2 + nociceptor axons in neuromas drive chronic spontaneous neuropathic pain

Xiangsunze Zeng, Rosa I Martinez-Garcia, Shamsuddin A Bhuiyan, Keunjung Heo, Natalie MacKinnon-Booth, Elke Bentley, Emily Shea, Kangling Wu, Omer Barkai, Bruna Lenfers Turnes, Selwyn S Jayakar, Barbara Gomez-Eslava, Mustafa Q Hameed, Celine Santiago, Karina Lezgiyeva, Emmanuella Osei-Asante, Ivan Furfaro, Alexander Rotenberg, Benjamin R Johnston, Brian J Wainger, William Renthal, Stéphanie P Lacour, David D Ginty, Clifford J Woolf
PMCID: PMC12621663  PMID: 41256706

Abstract

Spontaneous pain is a very common but poorly understood consequence of peripheral nerve injury. We developed a system for measuring spontaneous pain-related behaviors in mice over months, which revealed that limb flicks—emerging predominantly 2 months post-injury—reflect spontaneous pain, and that neuromas are the drivers of this component of neuropathic pain. In vivo dorsal root ganglion imaging showed that small-diameter sensory neurons are the source of spontaneous ectopic neuroma activity and are different from the intact neurons that drive stimulus-evoked pain. Cell–specific optogenetic stimulation studies identified that injured SSTR2 + sensory axons in neuromas are the triggers of spontaneous limb flicks/neuropathic pain. These findings reveal the mechanisms of spontaneous neuropathic pain and open new therapeutic opportunities.

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