Chronic pain often includes periods of transient amelioration and even remission that alternate with severe relapsing pain. While most research on chronic pain has focused on pain development and maintenance, there is a critical unmet need to better understand the mechanisms that underlie pain remission and relapse. We found that interleukin (IL)-10, a pain resolving cytokine, is produced by resident macrophages in the spinal meninges during remission from pain and signaled to IL-10 receptor-expressing sensory neurons. Using unbiased RNA-sequencing, we identified that IL-10 upregulated expression and antinociceptive activity of δ-opioid receptor (δOR) in the dorsal root ganglion. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of either IL-10 signaling or δOR triggered relapsing pain. Overall, our findings, from electrophysiology, genetic manipulation, flow cytometry, pharmacology, and behavioral approaches, indicate that remission of pain is not simply a return to the naïve state. Instead, remission is an adapted homeostatic state associated with lasting pain vulnerability resulting from persisting neuroimmune interactions within the nociceptive system. Broadly, this sheds light on the elusive mechanisms underlying recurrence a common aspect across various chronic pain conditions.
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