6533b824fe1ef96bd12814f0

RESEARCH PRODUCT

DNA Methylation and Non-Coding RNAs during Tissue-Injury Associated Pain.

Jahanzaib IrfanMuhammad Rizki FebriantoAnju SharmaThomas RoseYasamin MahmudzadeSimone Di GiovanniIstvan NagyJose Vicente Torres-perez

subject

INFLAMMATORY PAINRNA UntranslatedChemistry MultidisciplinaryAdaptation BiologicalReviewUP-REGULATIONEpigenesis GeneticCpG islandsTranscripció genèticalncRNANeurociènciesnociceptionBiology (General)SpectroscopyGENE-EXPRESSIONGeneral MedicineComputer Science ApplicationsChemistryPhysical SciencesDisease SusceptibilityChronic PainLife Sciences & BiomedicineepigeneticALLEVIATES NEUROPATHIC PAINBiochemistry & Molecular Biologydorsal root ganglionQH301-705.50699 Other Biological SciencesCatalysisCONTRIBUTESInorganic ChemistryDiagnosis DifferentialCENTRAL SENSITIZATION0399 Other Chemical SciencesHumansPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryQD1-999Molecular Biologyspinal dorsal hornmiRNACHRONIC CONSTRICTION INJURYneuropathic pain0604 GeneticsScience & TechnologyChemical PhysicsNERVE INJURYMICRORNAGene Expression ProfilingOrganic ChemistryDNA MethylationCPG-BINDING PROTEIN-2gene transcriptionGene Expression RegulationsiRNARNAWounds and InjuriesBiomarkers

description

While about half of the population experience persistent pain associated with tissue damages during their lifetime, current symptom-based approaches often fail to reduce such pain to a satisfactory level. To provide better patient care, mechanism-based analgesic approaches must be developed, which necessitates a comprehensive understanding of the nociceptive mechanism leading to tissue injury-associated persistent pain. Epigenetic events leading the altered transcription in the nervous system are pivotal in the maintenance of pain in tissue injury. However, the mechanisms through which those events contribute to the persistence of pain are not fully understood. This review provides a summary and critical evaluation of two epigenetic mechanisms, DNA methylation and non-coding RNA expression, on transcriptional modulation in nociceptive pathways during the development of tissue injury-associated pain. We assess the pre-clinical data and their translational implication and evaluate the potential of controlling DNA methylation and non-coding RNA expression as novel analgesic approaches and/or biomarkers of persistent pain.

10.3390/ijms23020752https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35054943