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Papers of the Week


Papers: 4 Apr 2020 - 10 Apr 2020


Animal Studies


2020 Apr 01


Pain

Postnatal maturation of spinal dynorphin circuits and their role in somatosensation.

Authors

Brewer CL, Styczynski LM, Serafin EK, Baccei ML
Pain. 2020 Apr 01.
PMID: 32251202.

Abstract

Inhibitory interneurons in the adult spinal dorsal horn (DH) can be neurochemically classified into subpopulations that regulate distinct somatosensory modalities. Although inhibitory networks in the rodent DH undergo dramatic remodeling over the first weeks of life, little is known about the maturation of identified classes of GABAergic interneurons, or whether their role in somatosensation shifts during development. We investigated age-dependent changes in the connectivity and function of prodynorphin (DYN)-lineage neurons in the mouse DH that suppress mechanosensation and itch during adulthood. In vitro patch clamp recordings revealed a developmental increase in primary afferent drive to DYN interneurons and a transition from exclusive C-fiber monosynaptic input to mixed A- and C-fiber innervation. While most adult DYN interneurons exhibited tonic firing as expected from their inhibitory phenotype, neonatal and adolescent DYN cells were predominantly classified as phasic or single-spiking. Importantly, we also found that the majority of inhibitory presynaptic terminals contacting lamina I spinoparabrachial projection neurons (PNs) originate from DYN neurons. Furthermore, inhibitory synaptic input from DYN interneurons onto PNs was weaker during the neonatal period, likely reflecting a lower number of GABAergic terminals and a reduced probability of GABA release compared to adults. Finally, spinal DYN interneurons attenuated mechanical sensitivity throughout development, but this population dampened acute non-histaminergic itch only during adulthood. Collectively, these findings suggest that the spinal 'gates' controlling sensory transmission to the brain may emerge in a modality-selective manner during early life due to the postnatal tuning of inhibitory synaptic circuits within the DH.