Functional and anatomical analyses of active spinal circuits in a mouse model of chronic pain

Author:

Targowska-Duda Katarzyna M.12,Peters Darian1,Marcus Jason L.1,Zribi Gilles1,Toll Lawrence13,Ozawa Akihiko13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Science, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, United States

2. Department of Biopharmacy, Medical University of Lublin, Lublin, Poland

3. Stiles-Nicholson Brain Institute, Florida Atlantic University, Jupiter, FL, United States

Abstract

Abstract Decades of efforts in elucidating pain mechanisms, including pharmacological, neuroanatomical, and physiological studies have provided insights into how nociceptive information transmits from the periphery to the brain and the locations receiving nociceptive signals. However, little is known about which specific stimulus-dependent activated neurons, amongst heterogeneous neural environments, discriminatively evoke the cognate pain behavior. We here shed light on the population of neurons in the spinal cord activated by a painful stimulus to identify chronic pain-dependent activated neuronal subsets using Fos2A-iCreER (TRAP2) mice. We have found a large number of neurons activated by a normally nonpainful stimulus in the spinal cord of spinal nerve–ligated mice, compared with sham. Neuronal activation was observed in laminae I and II outer under heat hyperalgesia. A large number of neurons in laminae II inner were activated in both mechanical allodynia and heat hyperalgesia conditions, while mechanical allodynia tends to be the only stimulus that activates cells at lamina II inner dorsal region. Neuroanatomical analyses using spinal cell markers identified a large number of spinal inhibitory neurons that are recruited by both mechanical allodynia and heat hyperalgesia. Of interest, spinal neurons expressing calretinin, calbindin, and parvalbumin were activated differently with distinct pain modalities (ie, mechanical allodynia vs heat hyperalgesia). Chemogenetic inhibition of those activated neurons significantly and specifically reduced the response to the pain stimulus associated with the stimulus modality originally given to the animals. These findings support the idea that spinal neuronal ensembles underlying nociceptive transmission undergo dynamic changes to regulate selective pain responses.

Funder

NINDS

NIDA

Florida Atlantic University, Stiles-Nicholson FAU Brain Institute

Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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