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Distinctive Neurophysiological Signatures of Analgesia after Inflammatory Pain in the ACC of Freely Moving Mice.
Kissinger, Samuel T; O'neil, Estefania; Li, Baolin; Johnson, Kirk W; Krajewski, Jeffrey L; Kato, Akihiko S.
Affiliation
  • Kissinger ST; Lilly Research Laboratories, Department of Neuroscience, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285.
  • O'neil E; Lilly Research Laboratories, Department of Neuroscience, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285.
  • Li B; Lilly Research Laboratories, Department of Neuroscience, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285.
  • Johnson KW; Lilly Research Laboratories, Department of Neuroscience, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285.
  • Krajewski JL; Lilly Research Laboratories, Department of Neuroscience, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285.
  • Kato AS; Lilly Research Laboratories, Department of Neuroscience, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285 kato_akihiko@lilly.com.
J Neurosci ; 44(29)2024 Jul 17.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38755005
ABSTRACT
Preclinical assessments of pain have often relied upon behavioral measurements and anesthetized neurophysiological recordings. Current technologies enabling large-scale neural recordings, however, have the potential to unveil quantifiable pain signals in conscious animals for preclinical studies. Although pain processing is distributed across many brain regions, the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is of particular interest in isolating these signals given its suggested role in the affective ("unpleasant") component of pain. Here, we explored the utility of the ACC toward preclinical pain research using head-mounted miniaturized microscopes to record calcium transients in freely moving male mice expressing genetically encoded calcium indicator 6f (GCaMP6f) under the Thy1 promoter. We verified the expression of GCaMP6f in excitatory neurons and found no intrinsic behavioral differences in this model. Using a multimodal stimulation paradigm across naive, pain, and analgesic conditions, we found that while ACC population activity roughly scaled with stimulus intensity, single-cell representations were highly flexible. We found only low-magnitude increases in population activity after complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) and insufficient evidence for the existence of a robust nociceptive ensemble in the ACC. However, we found a temporal sharpening of response durations and generalized increases in pairwise neural correlations in the presence of the mechanistically distinct analgesics gabapentin or ibuprofen after (but not before) CFA-induced inflammatory pain. This increase was not explainable by changes in locomotion alone. Taken together, these results highlight challenges in isolating distinct pain signals among flexible representations in the ACC but suggest a neurophysiological hallmark of analgesia after pain that generalizes to at least two analgesics.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Gyrus Cinguli Limits: Animals Language: En Journal: J Neurosci Year: 2024 Document type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Gyrus Cinguli Limits: Animals Language: En Journal: J Neurosci Year: 2024 Document type: Article
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