Litcius/Paper detail

A recent history of immune cell sex differences in the peripheral nervous system in persistent pain states

Madelene F. S. Ho, Olivia Farkas, Andréia V. Faria, Jason R. Plemel, Bradley J. Kerr

2025Brain Behavior and Immunity9 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pain is entwined with inflammation, and biological sex often influences mechanisms of the immune system. Due to possible differences in inflammatory mechanisms, women are predisposed to autoimmune diseases and chronic pain. Despite sex as a critical variable in clinical cases of autoimmune conditions and its pain comorbidities, fundamental investigations have long underrepresented female subjects in their studies. Fundamental research in the 2010s, however, identified a binary sex specific mechanism for pain in rodents: male pain is microglia-driven while female pain is T cell-driven. Since then, studies have expanded in neuro-immunology to indicate that the sex differences and immune cells involved in these processes take on more elaborate roles when expanded to other causal modalities and anatomical levels of neuropathic and inflammatory pain. In this mini-review, we highlight updated roles for macrophages, T cells, and B cells in the peripheral nervous system during persistent pain conditions: neuropathic pain and inflammatory pain. We discuss sex similarities and sex differences in these cell types. By parsing out the sex specific roles of immune cells in persistent pain states, we may be better positioned to find immune-based therapies that can effectively target chronic pain in sex-biased autoimmune conditions.

Topics & Concepts

PeripheralImmune systemPeripheral nervous systemMedicineNervous systemNeuroscienceCentral nervous systemImmunologyPsychologyInternal medicinePain Mechanisms and TreatmentsStress Responses and CortisolNeuropeptides and Animal Physiology