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Touch and tactile neuropathic pain sensitivity are set by corticospinal projections.

Authors :
Liu, Yuanyuan
Latremoliere, Alban
Li, Xinjian
Zhang, Zicong
Chen, Mengying
Wang, Xuhua
Fang, Chao
Zhu, Junjie
Alexandre, Chloe
Gao, Zhongyang
Chen, Bo
Ding, Xin
Zhou, Jin-Yong
Zhang, Yiming
Chen, Chinfei
Wang, Kuan Hong
Woolf, Clifford J.
He, Zhigang
Source :
Nature; Sep2018, Vol. 561 Issue 7724, p547-550, 4p, 1 Diagram, 13 Graphs
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Current models of somatosensory perception emphasize transmission from primary sensory neurons to the spinal cord and on to the brain<xref>1</xref>-<xref>4</xref>. Mental influence on perception is largely assumed to occur locally within the brain. Here we investigate whether sensory inflow through the spinal cord undergoes direct top-down control by the cortex. Although the corticospinal tract (CST) is traditionally viewed as a primary motor pathway<xref>5</xref>, a subset of corticospinal neurons (CSNs) originating in the primary and secondary somatosensory cortex directly innervate the spinal dorsal horn via CST axons. Either reduction in somatosensory CSN activity or transection of the CST in mice selectively impairs behavioural responses to light touch without altering responses to noxious stimuli. Moreover, such CSN manipulation greatly attenuates tactile allodynia in a model of peripheral neuropathic pain. Tactile stimulation activates somatosensory CSNs, and their corticospinal projections facilitate light-touch-evoked activity of cholecystokinin interneurons in the deep dorsal horn. This touch-driven feed-forward spinal-cortical-spinal sensitization loop is important for the recruitment of spinal nociceptive neurons under tactile allodynia. These results reveal direct cortical modulation of normal and pathological tactile sensory processing in the spinal cord and open up opportunities for new treatments for neuropathic pain. Somatosensory corticospinal neurons facilitate touch sensitivity and touch-evoked neuropathic pain in mice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
561
Issue :
7724
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132004482
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0515-2