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Papers of the Week


Papers: 9 Jan 2021 - 15 Jan 2021


Animal Studies


2021 Jan 19


Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A


118


3

A subset of spinal dorsal horn interneurons crucial for gating touch-evoked pain-like behavior.

Authors

Tashima R, Koga K, Yoshikawa Y, Sekine M, Watanabe M, Tozaki-Saitoh H, Furue H, Yasaka T, Tsuda M
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Jan 19; 118(3).
PMID: 33431693.

Abstract

A cardinal, intractable symptom of neuropathic pain is mechanical allodynia, pain caused by innocuous stimuli via low-threshold mechanoreceptors such as Aβ fibers. However, the mechanism by which Aβ fiber-derived signals are converted to pain remains incompletely understood. Here we identify a subset of inhibitory interneurons in the spinal dorsal horn (SDH) operated by adeno-associated viral vectors incorporating a neuropeptide Y promoter (AAV-NpyP) and show that specific ablation or silencing of AAV-NpyP SDH interneurons converted touch-sensing Aβ fiber-derived signals to morphine-resistant pain-like behavioral responses. AAV-NpyP neurons received excitatory inputs from Aβ fibers and transmitted inhibitory GABA signals to lamina I neurons projecting to the brain. In a model of neuropathic pain developed by peripheral nerve injury, AAV-NpyP neurons exhibited deeper resting membrane potentials, and their excitation by Aβ fibers was impaired. Conversely, chemogenetic activation of AAV-NpyP neurons in nerve-injured rats reversed Aβ fiber-derived neuropathic pain-like behavior that was shown to be morphine-resistant and reduced pathological neuronal activation of superficial SDH including lamina I. These findings suggest that identified inhibitory SDH interneurons that act as a critical brake on conversion of touch-sensing Aβ fiber signals into pain-like behavioral responses. Thus, enhancing activity of these neurons may offer a novel strategy for treating neuropathic allodynia.