Can satellite glial cells be therapeutic targets for pain control?

L Jasmin, JP Vit, A Bhargava, PT Ohara - Neuron glia biology, 2010 - cambridge.org
Neuron glia biology, 2010cambridge.org
Satellite glial cells (SGCs) undergo phenotypic changes and divide the following injury into
a peripheral nerve. Nerve injury, also elicits an immune response and several antigen-
presenting cells are found in close proximity to SGCs. Silencing SCG-specific molecules
involved in intercellular transport (Connexin 43) or glutamate recycling (glutamine synthase)
can dramatically alter nociceptive responses of normal and nerve-injured rats. Transducing
SGCs with glutamic acid decarboxylase can produce analgesia in models of trigeminal pain …
Satellite glial cells (SGCs) undergo phenotypic changes and divide the following injury into a peripheral nerve. Nerve injury, also elicits an immune response and several antigen-presenting cells are found in close proximity to SGCs. Silencing SCG-specific molecules involved in intercellular transport (Connexin 43) or glutamate recycling (glutamine synthase) can dramatically alter nociceptive responses of normal and nerve-injured rats. Transducing SGCs with glutamic acid decarboxylase can produce analgesia in models of trigeminal pain. Taken together these data suggest that SGCs may play a role in the genesis or maintenance of pain and open a range of new possibilities for curing neuropathic pain.
Cambridge University Press