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The single-cell transcriptomic atlas iPain identifies senescence of nociceptors as a therapeutical target for chronic pain treatment

Medicine and Health

The single-cell transcriptomic atlas iPain identifies senescence of nociceptors as a therapeutical target for chronic pain treatment

P. Techameena, X. Feng, et al.

Chronic pain affects nearly 20% of adults worldwide and remains inadequately treated. This groundbreaking research by Prach Techameena, Xiaona Feng, Kaiwen Zhang, and Saida Hadjab unveils the role of nociceptor senescence in chronic pain progression. With promising senolytic treatments shown to alleviate pain in mice, the study highlights a potential breakthrough in pain management.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Chronic pain remains a significant medical challenge with complex underlying mechanisms, and an urgent need for new treatments. Our research built and utilized the iPain single-cell atlas to study chronic pain progression in dorsal root and trigeminal ganglia. We discovered that senescence of a small subset of pain-sensing neurons may be a driver of chronic pain. This mechanism was observed in animal models after nerve injury and in human patients diagnosed with chronic pain or diabetic painful neuropathy. Notably, treatment with senolytics, drugs that remove senescent cells, reversed pain symptoms in mice post-injury. These findings highlight the role of cellular senescence in chronic pain development, demonstrate the therapeutic potential of senolytic treatments, and underscore the value of the iPain atlas for future pain research.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Oct 04, 2024
Authors
Prach Techameena, Xiaona Feng, Kaiwen Zhang, Saida Hadjab
Tags
chronic pain
nociceptors
senescence
senolytic treatment
pain management
neuroscience
disease progression
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