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Identification of spinal circuits involved in touch-evoked dynamic mechanical pain.

Citation
Cheng, L., et al. “Identification Of Spinal Circuits Involved In Touch-Evoked Dynamic Mechanical Pain.”. Nature Neuroscience, pp. 804-814.
Center Boston Area
Author Longzhen Cheng, Bo Duan, Tianwen Huang, Yan Zhang, Yangyang Chen, Olivier Britz, Lidia Garcia-Campmany, Xiangyu Ren, Linh Vong, Bradford B Lowell, Martyn Goulding, Yun Wang, Qiufu Ma
Abstract

Mechanical hypersensitivity is a debilitating symptom for millions of chronic pain patients. It exists in distinct forms, including brush-evoked dynamic and filament-evoked punctate hypersensitivities. We reduced dynamic mechanical hypersensitivity induced by nerve injury or inflammation in mice by ablating a group of adult spinal neurons defined by developmental co-expression of VGLUT3 and Lbx1 (VT3 neurons): the mice lost brush-evoked nocifensive responses and conditional place aversion. Electrophysiological recordings show that VT3 neurons form morphine-resistant polysynaptic pathways relaying inputs from low-threshold Aβ mechanoreceptors to lamina I output neurons. The subset of somatostatin-lineage neurons preserved in VT3-neuron-ablated mice is largely sufficient to mediate morphine-sensitive and morphine-resistant forms of von Frey filament-evoked punctate mechanical hypersensitivity. Furthermore, acute silencing of VT3 neurons attenuated pre-established dynamic mechanical hypersensitivity induced by nerve injury, suggesting that these neurons may be a cellular target for treating this form of neuropathic pain.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Nature neuroscience
Volume
20
Issue
6
Number of Pages
804-814
Date Published
06/2017
ISSN Number
1546-1726
DOI
10.1038/nn.4549
Alternate Journal
Nat. Neurosci.
PMID
28436981
PMCID
PMC5470641
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