miR-183 cluster scales mechanical pain sensitivity by regulating basal and neuropathic pain genes.
Changgeng PengLili LiMing-Dong ZhangCarolina Bengtsson GonzalesMarc ParisienInna BelferDmitry UsoskinHind AbdoAlessandro FurlanMartin HäringFrançois LallemendTibor HarkanyLuda DiatchenkoTomas HökfeltJens Hjerling LefflerPatrik ErnforsPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2017)
Nociception is protective and prevents tissue damage but can also facilitate chronic pain. Whether a general principle governs these two types of pain is unknown. Here, we show that both basal mechanical and neuropathic pain are controlled by the microRNA-183 (miR-183) cluster in mice. This single cluster controls more than 80% of neuropathic pain-regulated genes and scales basal mechanical sensitivity and mechanical allodynia by regulating auxiliary voltage-gated calcium channel subunits α2δ-1 and α2δ-2. Basal sensitivity is controlled in nociceptors, and allodynia involves TrkB+ light-touch mechanoreceptors. These light-touch-sensitive neurons, which normally do not elicit pain, produce pain during neuropathy that is reversed by gabapentin. Thus, a single microRNA cluster continuously scales acute noxious mechanical sensitivity in nociceptive neurons and suppresses neuropathic pain transduction in a specific, light-touch-sensitive neuronal type recruited during mechanical allodynia.