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Bacteria activate sensory neurons that modulate pain and inflammation

Authors
Chiu, Isaac M.Heesters, Balthasar A.Ghasemlou, NaderVon Hehn, Christian A.Zhao, FanTran, JohnathanWainger, BrianStrominger, AmandaMuralidharan, SriyaHorswill, Alexander R.Wardenburg, Juliane BubeckHwang, Sun WookCarroll, Michael C.Woolf, Clifford J.
Issue Date
5-9월-2013
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Citation
NATURE, v.501, no.7465, pp.52 - +
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NATURE
Volume
501
Number
7465
Start Page
52
End Page
+
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/102179
DOI
10.1038/nature12479
ISSN
0028-0836
Abstract
Nociceptor sensory neurons are specialized to detect potentially damaging stimuli, protecting the organism by initiating the sensation of pain and eliciting defensive behaviours. Bacterial infections produce pain by unknown molecular mechanisms, although they are presumed to be secondary to immune activation. Here we demonstrate that bacteria directly activate nociceptors, and that the immune response mediated through TLR2, MyD88, T cells, B cells, and neutrophils and monocytes is not necessary for Staphylococcus aureus-induced pain in mice. Mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia in mice is correlated with live bacterial load rather than tissue swelling or immune activation. Bacteria induce calcium flux and action potentials in nociceptor neurons, in part via bacterial N-formylated peptides and the pore-forming toxin alpha-haemolysin, through distinct mechanisms. Specific ablation of Nav1.8-lineage neurons, which include nociceptors, abrogated pain during bacterial infection, but concurrently increased local immune infiltration and lymphadenopathy of the draining lymph node. Thus, bacterial pathogens produce pain by directly activating sensory neurons that modulate inflammation, an unsuspected role for the nervous systemin host-pathogen interactions.
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