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Papers of the Week


Papers: 13 Jun 2020 - 19 Jun 2020


Animal Studies

PAIN TYPE:
Itch


2020 Jun 12


Neuroscience

Inhibition of itch by hunger and AgRP neuron activity.

Authors

Alhadeff AL, Park O, Hernandez E, Betley NJ
Neuroscience. 2020 Jun 12.
PMID: 32540365.

Abstract

Unpleasant somatosensory stimuli such as pain and itch can interrupt normal behavior. But survival can depend on resuming normal behavior before these challenges are fully resolved. The neural mechanisms that prioritize behavior when individuals are challenged with unpleasant somatosensory sensations, however, are not fully understood. Recently, we identified a neural circuit activated by hunger that can inhibit pain, prioritizing food seeking over tending to an injury. Here, we examine the ability of hunger, and neurons activated by hunger, to inhibit behavioral responses to another unpleasant somatosensory sensation – itch. We demonstrate that food deprivation inhibits scratching induced by 3 different pruritogenic stimuli: histamine, serotonin, and chloroquine. The inhibition of scratching correlates with the level of food deprivation, suggesting a cross-competition of alarm systems in the brain whereby more energy need more efficiently inhibits competing drives. Finally, we show that activity in hunger-sensitive, hypothalamic agouti-related protein (AgRP)-expressing neurons is sufficient to inhibit itch. Taken together, we showed that hunger or AgRP neuron activity inhibits itch, demonstrating that organisms have neural systems to filter and process ascending spinal signals activated by unpleasant somatosensory stimuli to prioritize salient needs.