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A neural circuit for comorbid depressive symptoms in chronic pain.

Wenjie ZhouYan JinQian MengXia ZhuTongjian BaiYanghua TianYu MaoLikui WangWen XieHui ZhongNa ZhangMin-Hua LuoWenjuan TaoHaitao WangJie LiJuan LiBen-Sheng QiuJiang-Ning ZhouXiang-Yao LiHan XuKai WangXiaochu ZhangYong LiuGal Richter-LevinFu-Qiang XuZhi Zhang
Published in: Nature neuroscience (2019)
Comorbid depressive symptoms (CDS) in chronic pain are a common health problem, but the neural circuit mechanisms underlying these symptoms remain unclear. Here we identify a novel pathway involving 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) projections from the dorsal raphe nucleus (5-HTDRN) to somatostatin (SOM)-expressing and non-SOM interneurons in the central nucleus of the amygdala (CeA). The SOMCeA neurons project directly to the lateral habenula, an area known involved in depression. Inhibition of the 5-HTDRN→SOMCeA pathway produced depression-like behavior in a male mouse model of chronic pain. Activation of this pathway using pharmacological or optogenetic approaches reduced depression-like behavior in these mice. Human functional magnetic resonance imaging data showed that compared to healthy controls, functional connectivity between the CeA-containing centromedial amygdala and the DRN was reduced in patients with CDS but not in patients in chronic pain without depression. These findings indicate that a novel 5-HTDRN→SOMCeA→lateral habenula pathway may mediate at least some aspects of CDS.
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