An amygdalar neural ensemble that encodes the unpleasantness of pain.
Gregory CorderBiafra AhanonuBenjamin F GreweDong WangMark J SchnitzerGrégory ScherrerPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2019)
Pain is an unpleasant experience. How the brain's affective neural circuits attribute this aversive quality to nociceptive information remains unknown. By means of time-lapse in vivo calcium imaging and neural activity manipulation in freely behaving mice encountering noxious stimuli, we identified a distinct neural ensemble in the basolateral amygdala that encodes the negative affective valence of pain. Silencing this nociceptive ensemble alleviated pain affective-motivational behaviors without altering the detection of noxious stimuli, withdrawal reflexes, anxiety, or reward. Following peripheral nerve injury, innocuous stimuli activated this nociceptive ensemble to drive dysfunctional perceptual changes associated with neuropathic pain, including pain aversion to light touch (allodynia). These results identify the amygdalar representations of noxious stimuli that are functionally required for the negative affective qualities of acute and chronic pain perception.
Keyphrases
- neuropathic pain
- chronic pain
- spinal cord
- spinal cord injury
- pain management
- bipolar disorder
- type diabetes
- peripheral nerve
- high resolution
- working memory
- convolutional neural network
- neural network
- multiple sclerosis
- hepatitis b virus
- intensive care unit
- health information
- photodynamic therapy
- depressive symptoms
- social media
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- postoperative pain
- label free
- high fat diet induced