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Long-term male-specific chronic pain via telomere- and p53‑mediated spinal cord cellular senescence
Authors:Arjun Muralidharan  Susana G Sotocinal  Noosha Yousefpour  Nur Akkurt  Lucas V Lima  Shannon Tansley  Marc Parisien  Chengyang Wang  Jean-Sebastien Austin  Boram Ham  Gabrielle MGS Dutra  Philippe Rousseau  Sioui Maldonado-Bouchard  Teleri Clark  Sarah F Rosen  Mariam R Majeed  Olivia Silva  Rachel Nejade  Xinyu Li  Stephania Donayre Pimentel  Christopher S Nielsen  G Gregory Neely  Chantal Autexier  Luda Diatchenko  Alfredo Ribeiro-da-Silva  Jeffrey S Mogil
Abstract:Mice with experimental nerve damage can display long‑lasting neuropathic pain behavior. We show here that 4 months and later after nerve injury, male but not female mice displayed telomere length (TL) reduction and p53‑mediated cellular senescence in the spinal cord, resulting in maintenance of pain and associated with decreased lifespan. Nerve injury increased the number of p53‑positive spinal cord neurons, astrocytes, and microglia, but only in microglia was the increase male‑specific, matching a robust sex specificity of TL reduction in this cell type, which has been previously implicated in male‑specific pain processing. Pain hypersensitivity was reversed by repeated intrathecal administration of a p53‑specific senolytic peptide, only in male mice and only many months after injury. Analysis of UK Biobank data revealed sex-specific relevance of this pathway in humans, featuring male‑specific genetic association of the human p53 locus (TP53) with chronic pain and a male-specific effect of chronic pain on mortality. Our findings demonstrate the existence of a biological mechanism maintaining pain behavior, at least in males, occurring much later than the time span of virtually all extant preclinical studies.
Keywords:Neuroscience
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