Publication | Open Access
Distinct basolateral amygdala excitatory inputs mediate the somatosensory and aversive-affective components of pain
26
Citations
41
References
2022
Year
Pain is a multidimensional perception that includes unpleasant somatosensory and affective experiences; however, the underlying neural circuits that mediate different components of pain remain elusive. Although hyperactivity of basolateral amygdala glutamatergic (BLA<sup>Glu</sup>) neurons is required for the somatosensory and emotional processing of pain, the precise excitatory inputs to BLA<sup>Glu</sup> neurons and their roles in mediating different aspects of pain are unclear. Here, we identified two discrete glutamatergic neuronal circuits in male mice: a projection from the insular cortex glutamatergic (IC<sup>Glu</sup>) to BLA<sup>Glu</sup> neurons, which modulates both the somatosensory and affective components of pain, and a projection from the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus (MD<sup>Glu</sup>) to BLA<sup>Glu</sup> neurons, which modulates only the aversive-affective component of pain. Using whole-cell recording and fiber photometry, we found that neurons within the IC→BLA and MD→BLA pathways were activated in mice upon inflammatory pain induced by injection of complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) into their paws. Optical inhibition of the IC<sup>Glu</sup>→BLA pathway increased the nociceptive threshold and induced behavioral place preference in CFA mice. In contrast, optical inhibition of the MD<sup>Glu</sup>→BLA pathway did not affect the nociceptive threshold but still induced place preference in CFA mice. In normal mice, optical activation of the IC<sup>Glu</sup>→BLA pathway decreased the nociceptive threshold and induced place aversion, while optical activation of the MD<sup>Glu</sup>→BLA pathway only evoked aversion. Taken together, our results demonstrate that discrete IC<sup>Glu</sup>→BLA and MD<sup>Glu</sup>→BLA pathways are involved in modulating different components of pain, provide insights into its circuit basis, and better our understanding of pain perception.
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