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

Citation
Cheng, Longzhen, et al. “Identification of Spinal Circuits Involved in Touch-Evoked Dynamic Mechanical Pain”. 2017. Nature Neuroscience, vol. 20, no. 6, 2017, 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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