| Literature DB >> 25408902 |
Pierre Veinante1, Ipek Yalcin1, Michel Barrot1.
Abstract
The amygdala is a structure of the temporal lobe thought to be involved in assigning emotional significance to environmental information and triggering adapted physiological, behavioral and affective responses. A large body of literature in animals and human implicates the amygdala in fear. Pain having a strong affective and emotional dimension, the amygdala, especially its central nucleus (CeA), has also emerged in the last twenty years as key element of the pain matrix. The CeA receives multiple nociceptive information from the brainstem, as well as highly processed polymodal information from the thalamus and the cerebral cortex. It also possesses the connections that allow influencing most of the descending pain control systems as well as higher centers involved in emotional, affective and cognitive functions. Preclinical studies indicate that the integration of nociceptive inputs in the CeA only marginally contributes to sensory-discriminative components of pain, but rather contributes to associated behavior and affective responses. The CeA doesn't have a major influence on responses to acute nociception in basal condition, but it induces hypoalgesia during aversive situation, such as stress or fear. On the contrary, during persistent pain states (inflammatory, visceral, neuropathic), a long-lasting functional plasticity of CeA activity contributes to an enhancement of the pain experience, including hyperalgesia, aversive behavioral reactions and affective anxiety-like states.Entities:
Keywords: Affective/emotional component; Amygdala; Hyperalgesia; Hypoalgesia; Persistent pain
Year: 2013 PMID: 25408902 PMCID: PMC4223879 DOI: 10.1186/2049-9256-1-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 2049-9256
Figure 1Anatomical organization of the amygdala. A: Frontal section of a rat brain at the level of the amygdala processed for acetylcholinesterase staining. The boxed area indicates the position of the magnified region right-hand. The four main groups are outlined: superficial (purple), basolateral (red), central (blue), medial (green). B: Schematic representation of the main amygdala nuclei. The basolateral group (red) includes the lateral (L), basolateral (BL), basolateral ventral (BLV) and basomedial (BM) nuclei. The central group is represented by the central nucleus with its capsular (CeLC), lateral (CeL) and medial (CeM) subdivisions. The medial (green) and superficial (purple) groups are represented at this level by the medial (MeA) and anterior cortical (ACo) nuclei, respectively. The intercalated cell masses (ITC, black) appear wedged between BL and CeA. Other abbreviations: CPu: caudate-putamen; ic: internal capsule; GP: globus pallidus; ot: optic tract. Photographs of acetylcholinesterase staining from the authors’ archive.
Figure 2Main connections of the CeA involved in pain processes. The CeA received highly processed polymodal information from the cerebral cortex and the thalamus essentially through inputs from the lateral (L) and basolateral (BL) nuclei, and more direct nociceptive information from the parabrachial nucleus. Intercalated cell masses (ITC) provide an inhibitory input driven by L and BL. Most of these afferents contact neurons in the capsular (CeLC) and lateral (CeL) subdivisions of the central nucleus which control the activity of neurons in the medial subdivision (CeM). Efferents arise mainly from the CeM and target the other components of the central extended amygdala, thalamic nuclei and the integrative, modulator and effector centers in the hypothalamus and the brainstem. Most of these structures send a reciprocal projection to the central nucleus.
Reported changes in the rodent CeA in different pain situations
| Pain situationa | Changes in the CeA | Reference |
|---|---|---|
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| Changes (mostly excitation) in electrical activity | [ |
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| ip acetic acid | - Increased | [ |
| Esophageal acetic acid | - Increased c-Fos immunoreactivity | [ |
| Colitis | - Increased neuronal excitability | [ |
| - Enhanced the PB-CeA, but not the BLA-CeA transmission | ||
| - Increased | ||
| Cystitis | - Increased c-Fos and Krox-24 imunoreactivities | [ |
| - Increased | ||
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| Intraplantar formalin | - Induced ERK activation in the right CeA | [ |
| Acid-induced muscle pain | - Increased ERK activation | [ |
| - Enhanced the PB-CeA transmission | ||
| Knee joint arthritis | - Increased spontaneous activity in the right CeA | [ |
| - Increased neuronal excitability in the right CeA | ||
| - Enhanced the PB-CeA and the BLA-CeA transmission | ||
| - Increased mGluR1 and mGluR5 expression | ||
| - Increased phosphorylation of NR1 subunit | ||
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| Sciatic nerve ligation or section | - Increased spontaneous and evoked activity differentially in the left and right CeA | [ |
| - Enhanced the PB-CeA transmission | ||
| - Increased | ||
| - Increased glucocorticoid receptor mRNA expression | ||
| - Increased cell proliferation | ||
a Pain situation: acute somatic stimulations: nociceptive mechanical pinches or thermal stimulations applied on different body parts; ip acetic acid: intraperitoneal injection of acetic acid; colitis: inflammation by intracolonic infusion TNBS (2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid) or zymosan; cystitis: urinary bladder inflammation by intraperitoneal injection of cyclophosphamide; intraplantar formalin: intraplantar injection of diluted formalin in hindpaw; Acid-induced muscle pain: intramuscular injection of acidic saline (pH4) in gastrocnemius; knee-joint arthritis: intraarticular injection of kaolin-caragenean in knee; Sciatic nerve ligation or section: loose or tight ligation of sciatic nerve or spinal roots, or sparing section of roots.
Effects of CeA manipulation on pain-related outcomes in different pain models
| Pain typea | Pain related outcomeb | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nociceptive behavior | Affective/emotional | ||
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| Naïve | - Reduced morphine-induced, stress-induced and conditioned hypoalgesia | [ | |
| Formalin | - Reduced morphine-induced and conditioned hypoalgesia | - Decreased pain-induced CPA | [ |
| Acetic acid | - Decreased pain-induced CPA | [ | |
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| Neuropathy | - Reduced mechanical hyperalgesia | - Decreased escape/avoidance | [ |
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| Neuropathy | - Decreased pain-induced CPA | [ | |
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| Naïve | - Agonist induced visceral and mechanical hypersensitivity | [ | |
| - Antagonist reduced visceral sensitivity | |||
| Formalin | - Antagonist reduced mechanical hypersensitivity | [ | |
| Arthritis | - Antagonist reduced mechanical hypersensitivity | - Antagonist decreased vocalizations | [ |
| Neuropathy | - Agonist increased, and antagonist decreased, pain-induced CPA | [ | |
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| Naïve | - Decreased mechanical sensitivity (mGluR7) | - Decreased vocalizations and anxiety | [ |
| Arthritis | - Increased mechanical sensitivity (mGluR8) | - Increased vocalizations and anxiety | [ |
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| Naïve | - Decreased thermal sensitivity, reduced jaw opening reflex | - Decreased vocalizations | [ |
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| Naïve | - Agonist induced mechanical and thermal hypoalgesia | [ | |
| - Antagonist reduced stress-induced thermal hypoalgesia | |||
| Acetic acid | - Agonist decreased pain-induced CPA | [ | |
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| Acetic acid | - Decreased pain-induced CPA | [ | |
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| Naïve | - CGRP decreased mechanical and thermal reflexes | [ | |
| Naïve | - CGRP increased mechanical reflexes | - CGRP increased vocalizations | [ |
| Arthritis | - CGRP1 antagonist inhibited the enhanced reflex to mechanical stimulus | - CGRP1 antagonist decreased vocalizations | [ |
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| Naïve | - CRF decreased mechanical and thermal sensitivity | [ | |
| Naïve | - CRF increases mechanical sensitivity | - CRF increased vocalizations | [ |
| Arthritis | - CRF1 antagonist reduced mechanical hypersensitivity | - CRF1 antagonist decreased vocalizations and anxiety | [ |
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| Naïve | - Decreased mechanical and/or thermal sensitivity | [ | |
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| Naïve | - Morphine and β-endorphin induced mechanical and thermal hypoalgesia | - Morphine decreased vocalizations | [ |
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| Naïve | - Sensitized visceromotor reflexes to colorectal and urinary bladder distension and to somatic mechanical sensitivity | - Increased anxiety | [ |
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| Naïve | - Decreased morphine-induced mechanical and thermal hypoalgesia | [ | |
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| Naïve | - ERK activator induced mechanical hypersensitivity | [ | |
| Formalin | - ERK activation inhibitor decreased mechanical hypersensitivity | [ | |
| Arthritis | - ERK activation inhibitor and PKA inhibitor decreased mechanical hypersensitivity | - ERK activation inhibitor and PKA inhibitor decreased vocalizations | [ |
aPain type. naive nociceptive testing on naive animals; formalin: intraplantar injection of diluted formalin in hindpaw; acetic: intraperitoneal injection of acetic acid; arthritis: intraarticular injection of kaolin-caragenean in knee; neuropathy: compression or ligation of sciatic nerve or spinal root.
bPain related outcome. thermal sensitivity: latency of withdrawal or escape in tail-flick, hot-plate or Heargraves tests; mechanical sensitivity: latency or threshold to withdrawal in von Frey or Randall-Sellito tests; CPA: pain-induced conditioned place aversion; vocalizations: intensity/duration/threshold of vocalizations to electrical shock (naive) or mechanical compression of knee (naive, arthritis); anxiety: anxiety-like behavior in elevated plus maze test.
Figure 3Molecular actors in nociceptive processing in the CeA during arthritic pain. The CeA received nociceptive inputs from glutamatergic (Glu) neurons in the basolateral amygdala (BLA) and in the parabrachial nucleus (PB). GABAergic innervation originates from intrinsic source (CeA and BSTL) and from the intercalated cell masses (ITC). Additional modulation is provided by monoaminergic (MA) and cholinergic (ACh) afferents and by neuropeptides (Np), especially from CeA, BSTL and PB. These neuromediators act on excitatory (green) and inhibitory (red) receptors at pre and post-synaptic levels. In the knee monoarthritis model [5], several mechanisms contribute to a enhanced neurotransmission. At pre-synaptic level, mGluR1 receptors inhibit GABA release, while mGluR from groups II and III decrease glutamate release. At post-synaptic level, mGluR5 receptors are involved in normal transmission in naive animals and NMDA and AMPA ionotropic receptors have also an enhanced activity increasing neuronal sensitivity. CGRP, from PB, and CRF, possibly from the central extended amygdala itself, activate their post-synaptic receptors, CGRP1 and CRF1, respectively. These receptors can activate the protein kinase A (PKA) and thus increase NMDA phosphorylation. The extracellular regulated-signal kinase ERK also contributes to the sensitization of CeA neurons, possibly through a cascade initiated by mGluR5 receptors. CRF can also decrease the activity of CeA neurons, via pre-synaptic CRF2 receptors increasing GABA release. This leads to the inhibition of CeA neurons by activation of post-synaptic GABA A and GABA B receptors and by inhibition of glutamate release by pre-synaptic GABA B receptors. Other neurotransmission system involving noradrenergic (NA, especially through pre-synaptic α2-receptors), dopaminergic (DA), serotonergic (5-HT) and cholinergic (ACh) receptors can modulate CeA activity, as well as other neuropeptides, among them opioids acting on pre- and post-synaptic mu receptors (MOR), and BDNF acting on TrkB receptors. Overall, these mechanisms lead to the modulation of the intra-CeA circuitry, based on GABAergic interactions (in blue) and of the CeA output.