Distinct Thalamo‐Subcortical Circuits Underlie Painful Behavior and Depression‐Like Behavior Following Nerve Injury

Author:

Deng Jie1,Chen Li1,Liu Cui‐Cui2,Liu Meng3,Guo Guo‐Qing4,Wei Jia‐You1,Zhang Jian‐Bo5,Fan Hai‐Ting6,Zheng Zi‐Kun7,Yan Pu8,Zhang Xiang‐Zhong8,Zhou Feng9,Huang Sui‐Xiang10,Zhang Ji‐Feng4,Xu Ting1,Xie Jing‐Dun11,Xin Wen‐Jun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology and Pain Research Center Neuroscience Program Zhongshan School of Medicine The Fifth Affiliated Hospital Guangdong Province Key Laboratory of Brain Function and Disease Sun Yat‐Sen University Guangzhou 510080 China

2. Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Malignant Tumor Epigenetics and Gene Regulation Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Sun Yat‐Sen Memorial Hospital Sun Yat‐Sen University Guangzhou 510120 China

3. Department of Anesthesia and Pain Medicine Guangzhou First People's Hospital Guangzhou 510000 China

4. Neuroscience Laboratory for Cognitive and Developmental Disorders Department of Anatomy Medical College of Jinan University Guangzhou 510630 China

5. Department of Pain Medicine The State Key Clinical Specialty in Pain Medicine The Second Affiliated Hospital Guangzhou Medical University Guangzhou 510630 China

6. Department of Anesthesiology The First Affiliated Hospital Sun Yat‐sen University Guangzhou 510080 China

7. Department of Electronic Engineering Shantou University Shantou 515063 China

8. Department of Hematology The Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat‐sen University Guangzhou 510630 China

9. Department of Neurology First people's hospital of Foshan Foshan Guangdong 510168 China

10. Department of Pain Medicine Guangzhou Red Cross Hospital Affiliated to Jinan University Guangzhou 510630 China

11. State Key Laboratory of Oncology in Southern China Collaborative Innovation for Cancer Medicine Sun Yat‐sen University Cancer Center Guangzhou 510060 China

Abstract

AbstractClinically, chronic pain and depression often coexist in multiple diseases and reciprocally reinforce each other, which greatly escalates the difficulty of treatment. The neural circuit mechanism underlying the chronic pain/depression comorbidity remains unclear. The present study reports that two distinct subregions in the paraventricular thalamus (PVT) play different roles in this pathological process. In the first subregion PVT posterior (PVP), glutamatergic neurons (PVPGlu) send signals to GABAergic neurons (VLPAGGABA) in the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (VLPAG), which mediates painful behavior in comorbidity. Meanwhile, in another subregion PVT anterior (PVA), glutamatergic neurons (PVAGlu) send signals to the nucleus accumbens D1‐positive neurons and D2‐positive neurons (NAcD1→D2), which is involved in depression‐like behavior in comorbidity. This study demonstrates that the distinct thalamo‐subcortical circuits PVPGlu→VLPAGGABA and PVAGlu→NAcD1→D2 mediated painful behavior and depression‐like behavior following spared nerve injury (SNI), respectively, which provides the circuit‐based potential targets for preventing and treating comorbidity.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Science and Technology Planning Project of Guangdong Province

Publisher

Wiley

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