"The goal was to study the key aspects of how the nervous system generates the sense of pain. The idea was to create the key elements of the human nervous system involved in pain in a dish," added Dr Woolf, who led the study.
"We've made neurons [nerve cells] that retain the key aspects of the pain system. They act like a fire alarm but instead of detecting a fire they detect tissue damage."
The nerve cells created at Harvard respond to immediate physical injury - the acute "ouch" pain - as well as the more subtle forms of chronic, longer-term pain caused by things like tissue inflammation or the side-effect of chemotherapy drugs, he said.
When the pain cells are heated above 42C they start to fire off signals just as they would in the skin of someone who touches a hot plate. They also fire off signals when brought into contact with capsaicin, the active component of chili peppers that give them their hot taste.
The pain cells were created from ordinary skin cells with the help of five biochemical ingredients or "transcription factors" that caused the genes of the skin cells to turn off and the genes of the pain cells to turn on, according to the study, published in the journal Nature Neuroscience.
Dr Woolf said that this relatively simple approach - which did not involve the use of embryos or embryonic stem cells - suggests it may one day be possible to create bespoke "pain in a dish" models for patients troubled with long-term, chronic pain in order to study potential treatments.
"I think the ability to make human pain neurons for the pain field is going to be very important," Dr Woolf said.
- The Independent