Role of IL‐15 in spinal cord and sciatic nerve after chronic constriction injury: regulation of macrophage and T‐cell infiltration

D Gómez‐Nicola, B Valle‐Argos… - Journal of …, 2008 - Wiley Online Library
D Gómez‐Nicola, B Valle‐Argos, M Suardíaz, JS Taylor, M Nieto‐Sampedro
Journal of neurochemistry, 2008Wiley Online Library
The release of inflammatory mediators from immune and glial cells either in the peripheral or
CNS may have an important role in the development of physiopathological processes such
as neuropathic pain. Microglial, then astrocytic activation in the spinal cord, lead to chronic
inflammation, alteration of neuronal physiology and neuropathic pain. Standard
experimental models of neuropathic pain include an important peripheral inflammatory
component, which involves prominent immune cell activation and infiltration. Among …
Abstract
The release of inflammatory mediators from immune and glial cells either in the peripheral or CNS may have an important role in the development of physiopathological processes such as neuropathic pain. Microglial, then astrocytic activation in the spinal cord, lead to chronic inflammation, alteration of neuronal physiology and neuropathic pain. Standard experimental models of neuropathic pain include an important peripheral inflammatory component, which involves prominent immune cell activation and infiltration. Among potential immunomodulators, the T‐cell cytokine interleukin‐15 (IL‐15) has a key role in regulating immune cell activation and glial reactivity after CNS injury. Here we show, using the model of chronic constriction of the sciatic nerve (CCI), that IL‐15 is essential for the development of the early inflammatory events in the spinal cord after a peripheral lesion that generates neuropathic pain. IL‐15 expression in the spinal cord was identified in both astroglial and microglial cells and was present during the initial gliotic and inflammatory (NFκB) response to injury. The expression of IL‐15 was also identified as a cue for macrophage and T‐cell activation and infiltration in the sciatic nerve, as shown by intraneural injection of the cytokine and activity blockage approaches. We conclude that the regulation of IL‐15 and hence the initial events following its expression after peripheral nerve injury could have a future therapeutic potential in the reduction of neuroinflammation.
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