TY - JOUR
T1 - The impact of chronic pain on brain gene expression
AU - Members of the Traumatic Stress Brain Research Group (Consortia Authors)
AU - Collier, Lily
AU - Seah, Carina
AU - Hicks, Emily M.
AU - Holtzheimer, Paul E.
AU - Krystal, John H.
AU - Girgenti, Matthew J.
AU - Huckins, Laura M.
AU - Johnston, Keira J.A.
AU - Alvarez, Victor E.
AU - Benedek, David
AU - Che, Alicia
AU - Cruz, Dianne A.
AU - Davis, David A.
AU - Girgenti, Matthew J.
AU - Hoffman, Ellen
AU - Holtzheimer, Paul E.
AU - Huber, Bertrand R.
AU - Kaye, Alfred
AU - Krystal, John H.
AU - Labadorf, Adam T.
AU - Keane, Terence M.
AU - Logue, Mark W.
AU - McKee, Ann
AU - Marx, Brian
AU - Miller, Mark W.
AU - Noller, Crystal
AU - Montalvo-Ortiz, Janitza
AU - Pierce, Meghan
AU - Scott, William K.
AU - Schnurr, Paula
AU - DiSano, Krista
AU - Stein, Thor
AU - Ursano, Robert
AU - Williamson, Douglas E.
AU - Wolf, Erika J.
AU - Young, Keith A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the International Association for the Study of Pain.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Chronic pain affects one-fifth of American adults, contributing significant public health burden. Chronic pain can be further understood through investigating brain gene expression, potentially informing on brain regions, cell types, and gene pathways. We tested for differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in chronic pain, migraine, lifetime fentanyl and oxymorphone use, and with chronic pain genetic risk in 4 brain regions (dorsal anterior cingulate cortex [dACC], dorsolateral prefrontal cortex [DLPFC], medial amygdala [MeA], and basolateral amygdala [BLA]) and imputed cell type expression data from 304 deeply phenotyped postmortem donors, potentially highlighting variation relevant to factors such as predisposition to chronic pain development, mechanisms of chronic pain development and persistence, and indirect effects of chronic pain and associated treatment or medication, and substance use. We also investigated sex differences in chronic pain differential gene expression. At the brain region level, we identified 2 chronic pain DEGs: B4GALT2 and VEGFB in dACC. At the cell level, we found more than 2000 chronic pain cell-type DEGs, significantly enriched in microglia of the basolateral amygdala. The findings were enriched for mouse microglia pain genes, and for hypoxia and immune response pathways. Small amounts of cross-trait DEG overlap in migraine and chronic pain highlighted medial amygdala cells, and in chronic pain and oxymorphone use suggested the amygdala as a key region. Chronic pain differential gene expression was not significantly different between men and women. Overall, chronic pain-associated gene expression is heterogeneous across region and cell type, is largely distinct from that in pain-related factors and migraine, and our results highlight BLA microglia as a key brain cell type in chronic pain.
AB - Chronic pain affects one-fifth of American adults, contributing significant public health burden. Chronic pain can be further understood through investigating brain gene expression, potentially informing on brain regions, cell types, and gene pathways. We tested for differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in chronic pain, migraine, lifetime fentanyl and oxymorphone use, and with chronic pain genetic risk in 4 brain regions (dorsal anterior cingulate cortex [dACC], dorsolateral prefrontal cortex [DLPFC], medial amygdala [MeA], and basolateral amygdala [BLA]) and imputed cell type expression data from 304 deeply phenotyped postmortem donors, potentially highlighting variation relevant to factors such as predisposition to chronic pain development, mechanisms of chronic pain development and persistence, and indirect effects of chronic pain and associated treatment or medication, and substance use. We also investigated sex differences in chronic pain differential gene expression. At the brain region level, we identified 2 chronic pain DEGs: B4GALT2 and VEGFB in dACC. At the cell level, we found more than 2000 chronic pain cell-type DEGs, significantly enriched in microglia of the basolateral amygdala. The findings were enriched for mouse microglia pain genes, and for hypoxia and immune response pathways. Small amounts of cross-trait DEG overlap in migraine and chronic pain highlighted medial amygdala cells, and in chronic pain and oxymorphone use suggested the amygdala as a key region. Chronic pain differential gene expression was not significantly different between men and women. Overall, chronic pain-associated gene expression is heterogeneous across region and cell type, is largely distinct from that in pain-related factors and migraine, and our results highlight BLA microglia as a key brain cell type in chronic pain.
KW - Amygdala
KW - Chronic pain
KW - Cortex
KW - Differentially expressed genes
KW - Microglia
KW - Opioids
KW - Polygenic risk scores
KW - Postmortem brain donors
KW - Transcriptomics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105010929233&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003707
DO - 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003707
M3 - Article
C2 - 40623285
AN - SCOPUS:105010929233
SN - 0304-3959
JO - Pain
JF - Pain
M1 - 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003707
ER -