Literature DB >> 18335545

Identity of myelinated cutaneous sensory neurons projecting to nocireceptive laminae following nerve injury in adult mice.

C Jeffery Woodbury1, Florenta A Kullmann, Sabrina L McIlwrath, H Richard Koerber.   

Abstract

It is widely thought that, after peripheral injury, some low-threshold mechanoreceptive (LTMR) afferents "sprout" into pain-specific laminae (I-II) of the dorsal horn and are responsible for chronic pain states such as mechanical allodynia. Although recent studies have questioned this hypothesis, they fail to account for a series of compelling results from single-fiber analyses showing extensive projections from large-diameter myelinated afferents into nocireceptive layers after nerve injury. Here we show that, in the thoracic spinal cord of naïve adult mouse, all myelinated nociceptors gave rise to terminal projections throughout the superficial dorsal horn laminae (I-II). Most (70%) of these fibers had large-diameter axons with recurving flame-shaped central arbors that projected throughout the dorsal horn laminae I-V. This morphology was reminiscent of that attributed to sprouted LTMRs described in previous studies. After peripheral nerve axotomy, we found that LTMR afferents with narrow, uninflected somal action potentials did not sprout into superficial laminae of the dorsal horn. Only myelinated noiceptive afferents with broad, inflected somal action potentials were found to give rise to recurving collaterals and project into superficial "pain-specific" laminae after axotomy. We conclude that the previously undocumented central morphology of large, myelinated cutaneous nociceptors may very well account for the morphological findings previously thought to require sprouting of LTMRs. (c) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18335545      PMCID: PMC2664515          DOI: 10.1002/cne.21693

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Neurol        ISSN: 0021-9967            Impact factor:   3.215


  48 in total

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7.  Similar electrophysiological changes in axotomized and neighboring intact dorsal root ganglion neurons.

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Review 9.  Delta Opioid Receptor Expression and Function in Primary Afferent Somatosensory Neurons.

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