An analgesic pathway from parvocellular oxytocin neurons to the periaqueductal gray in rats
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Published:2023-02-24
Issue:1
Volume:14
Page:
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ISSN:2041-1723
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Container-title:Nature Communications
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Commun
Author:
Iwasaki Mai, Lefevre ArthurORCID, Althammer Ferdinand, Clauss Creusot Etienne, Łąpieś OlgaORCID, Petitjean Hugues, Hilfiger LouisORCID, Kerspern Damien, Melchior Meggane, Küppers StephanieORCID, Krabichler QuirinORCID, Patwell RyanORCID, Kania AlanORCID, Gruber Tim, Kirchner Matthew K.ORCID, Wimmer Moritz, Fröhlich Henning, Dötsch Laura, Schimmer Jonas, Herpertz Sabine C., Ditzen Beate, Schaaf Christian P., Schönig Kai, Bartsch Dusan, Gugula AnnaORCID, Trenk AleksandraORCID, Blasiak AnnaORCID, Stern Javier E., Darbon Pascal, Grinevich ValeryORCID, Charlet AlexandreORCID
Abstract
AbstractThe hypothalamic neuropeptide oxytocin (OT) exerts prominent analgesic effects via central and peripheral action. However, the precise analgesic pathways recruited by OT are largely elusive. Here we discovered a subset of OT neurons whose projections preferentially terminate on OT receptor (OTR)-expressing neurons in the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (vlPAG). Using a newly generated line of transgenic rats (OTR-IRES-Cre), we determined that most of the vlPAG OTR expressing cells targeted by OT projections are GABAergic. Ex vivo stimulation of parvocellular OT axons in the vlPAG induced local OT release, as measured with OT sensor GRAB. In vivo, optogenetically-evoked axonal OT release in the vlPAG of as well as chemogenetic activation of OTR vlPAG neurons resulted in a long-lasting increase of vlPAG neuronal activity. This lead to an indirect suppression of sensory neuron activity in the spinal cord and strong analgesia in both female and male rats. Altogether, we describe an OT-vlPAG-spinal cord circuit that is critical for analgesia in both inflammatory and neuropathic pain models.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary
Reference61 articles.
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