Neuronal complexity is attenuated in preclinical models of migraine and restored by HDAC6 inhibition.
Zachariah BertelsHarinder SinghIsaac DrippsKendra SiegersmaAlycia F TiptonWiktor D WitkowskiZoie SheetsPal ShahCatherine ConwayElizaveta MangutovMei AoValentina PetukhovaBhargava KarumudiPavel A PetukhovSerapio M BacaMark M RasenickAmynah Amir Ali PradhanPublished in: eLife (2021)
Migraine is the sixth most prevalent disease worldwide but the mechanisms that underlie migraine chronicity are poorly understood. Cytoskeletal flexibility is fundamental to neuronal-plasticity and is dependent on dynamic microtubules. Histone-deacetylase-6 (HDAC6) decreases microtubule dynamics by deacetylating its primary substrate, α-tubulin. We use validated mouse models of migraine to show that HDAC6-inhibition is a promising migraine treatment and reveal an undiscovered cytoarchitectural basis for migraine chronicity. The human migraine trigger, nitroglycerin, produced chronic migraine-associated pain and decreased neurite growth in headache-processing regions, which were reversed by HDAC6 inhibition. Cortical spreading depression (CSD), a physiological correlate of migraine aura, also decreased cortical neurite growth, while HDAC6-inhibitor restored neuronal complexity and decreased CSD. Importantly, a calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonist also restored blunted neuronal complexity induced by nitroglycerin. Our results demonstrate that disruptions in neuronal cytoarchitecture are a feature of chronic migraine, and effective migraine therapies might include agents that restore microtubule/neuronal plasticity.