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Protective role of neuronal and lymphoid cannabinoid CB receptors in neuropathic pain.

eLife

Authors: David Cabañero, Angela Ramírez-López, Eva Drews, Anne Schmöle, David M Otte, Agnieszka Wawrzczak-Bargiela, Hector Huerga Encabo, Sami Kummer, Antonio Ferrer-Montiel, Ryszard Przewlocki, Andreas Zimmer, Rafael Maldonado

Cannabinoid CB receptor (CB) agonists are potential analgesics void of psychotropic effects. Peripheral immune cells, neurons and glia express CB; however, the involvement of CB from these cells in neuropathic pain remains unresolved. We explored spontaneous neuropathic pain through on-demand self-administration of the selective CB agonist JWH133 in wild-type and knockout mice lacking CB in neurons, monocytes or constitutively. Operant self-administration reflected drug-taking to alleviate spontaneous pain, nociceptive and affective manifestations. While constitutive deletion of CB disrupted JWH133-taking behavior, this behavior was not modified in monocyte-specific CB knockouts and was increased in mice defective in neuronal CB knockouts suggestive of increased spontaneous pain. Interestingly, CB-positive lymphocytes infiltrated the injured nerve and possible CBtransfer from immune cells to neurons was found. Lymphocyte CBdepletion also exacerbated JWH133 self-administration and inhibited antinociception. This work identifies a simultaneous activity of neuronal and lymphoid CBthat protects against spontaneous and evoked neuropathic pain.

© 2020, Cabañero et al.

PMID: 32687056

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