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1.
Cell Rep ; 23(7): 2001-2013, 2018 05 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29768200

ABSTRACT

Primary afferents transduce environmental stimuli into electrical activity that is transmitted centrally to be decoded into corresponding sensations. However, it remains unknown how afferent populations encode different somatosensory inputs. To address this, we performed two-photon Ca2+ imaging from thousands of dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons in anesthetized mice while applying mechanical and thermal stimuli to hind paws. We found that approximately half of all neurons are polymodal and that heat and cold are encoded very differently. As temperature increases, more heating-sensitive neurons are activated, and most individual neurons respond more strongly, consistent with graded coding at population and single-neuron levels, respectively. In contrast, most cooling-sensitive neurons respond in an ungraded fashion, inconsistent with graded coding and suggesting combinatorial coding, based on which neurons are co-activated. Although individual neurons may respond to multiple stimuli, our results show that different stimuli activate distinct combinations of diversely tuned neurons, enabling rich population-level coding.


Subject(s)
Cold Temperature , Hot Temperature , Neurons, Afferent/physiology , Sensory Receptor Cells/physiology , Animals , Calcium/metabolism , Female , Ganglia, Spinal/metabolism , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL
2.
Brain ; 137(Pt 3): 724-38, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24369380

ABSTRACT

Neuropathic pain is a widespread and highly debilitating condition commonly resulting from injury to the nervous system, one main sequela of which is tactile allodynia, a pain induced by innocuous mechanical stimulation of the skin. Yet, the cellular mechanisms and neuronal substrates underlying this pathology have remained elusive. We studied this by quantifying and manipulating behavioural and neuronal nociceptive thresholds in normal and pathological pain conditions. We found that, in both control rats and those with pain hypersensitivity induced by nerve injury, the nociceptive paw withdrawal threshold matches the response threshold of nociceptive-specific deep spinothalamic tract neurons. In contrast, wide dynamic range or multimodal spinothalamic tract neurons showed no such correlation nor any change in properties after nerve injury. Disrupting Cl(-) homeostasis by blocking K(+)-Cl(-) co-transporter 2 replicated the decrease in threshold of nociceptive-specific spinothalamic tract neurons without affecting wide dynamic range spinothalamic tract cells. Accordingly, only combined blockade of both GABAA- and glycine-gated Cl(-) channels replicated the effects of nerve injury or K(+)-Cl(-) co-transporter 2 blockade to their full extent. Conversely, rescuing K(+)-Cl(-) co-transporter 2 function restored the threshold of nociceptive-specific spinothalamic tract neurons to normal values in animals with nerve injury. Thus, we unveil a tight association between tactile allodynia and abnormal sensory coding within the normally nociceptive-specific spinothalamic tract. Thus allodynia appears to result from a switch in modality specificity within normally nociceptive-specific spinal relay neurons rather than a change in gain within a multimodal ascending tract. Our findings identify a neuronal substrate and a novel cellular mechanism as targets for the treatment of pathological pain.


Subject(s)
Hyperalgesia/physiopathology , Ion Transport/physiology , Neurons , Nociception/physiology , Spinothalamic Tracts/physiopathology , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Hyperalgesia/metabolism , Male , Microelectrodes , Neurons/cytology , Neurons/metabolism , Pain Measurement , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Potassium Chloride/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Spinal Cord Injuries/chemically induced , Spinal Cord Injuries/metabolism , Spinal Cord Injuries/physiopathology , Spinothalamic Tracts/cytology , Spinothalamic Tracts/injuries , Spinothalamic Tracts/metabolism , Symporters
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