Controlling pathological pain by adenovirally driven spinal production of the anti‐inflammatory cytokine, interleukin‐10
- 1 April 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 21 (8) , 2136-2148
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1460-9568.2005.04057.x
Abstract
Gene therapy for the control of pain has, to date, targeted neurons. However, recent evidence supports that spinal cord glia are critical to the creation and maintenance of pain facilitation through the release of proinflammatory cytokines. Because of the ability of interleukin‐10 (IL‐10) to suppress proinflammatory cytokines, we tested whether an adenoviral vector encoding human IL‐10 (AD‐h‐IL10) would block and reverse pain facilitation. Three pain models were examined, all of which are mediated by spinal pro‐inflammatory cytokines. Acute intrathecal administration of rat IL‐10 protein itself briefly reversed chronic constriction injury‐induced mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia. The transient reversal caused by IL‐10 protein paralleled the half‐life of human IL‐10 protein in the intrathecal space (t1/2 ∼ 2 h). IL‐10 gene therapy both prevented and reversed thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia, without affecting basal responses to thermal or mechanical stimuli. Extra‐territorial, as well as territorial, pain changes were reversed by this treatment. Intrathecal AD‐h‐IL10 injected over lumbosacral spinal cord led to elevated lumbosacral cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of human IL‐10, with far less human IL‐10 observed in cervical CSF. In keeping with IL‐10's known anti‐inflammatory actions, AD‐h‐IL10 lowered CSF levels of IL‐1, relative to control AD. These studies support that this gene therapy approach provides an alternative to neuronally focused drug and gene therapies for clinical pain control.Keywords
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