| Literature DB >> 28818946 |
Di Mu1,2, Juan Deng1,2, Ke-Fei Liu1, Zhen-Yu Wu3, Yu-Feng Shi1, Wei-Min Guo1, Qun-Quan Mao1, Xing-Jun Liu1, Hui Li3, Yan-Gang Sun4.
Abstract
Although itch sensation is an important protective mechanism for animals, chronic itch remains a challenging clinical problem. Itch processing has been studied extensively at the spinal level. However, how itch information is transmitted to the brain and what central circuits underlie the itch-induced scratching behavior remain largely unknown. We found that the spinoparabrachial pathway was activated during itch processing and that optogenetic suppression of this pathway impaired itch-induced scratching behaviors. Itch-mediating spinal neurons, which express the gastrin-releasing peptide receptor, are disynaptically connected to the parabrachial nucleus via glutamatergic spinal projection neurons. Blockade of synaptic output of glutamatergic neurons in the parabrachial nucleus suppressed pruritogen-induced scratching behavior. Thus, our studies reveal a central neural circuit that is critical for itch signal processing.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28818946 DOI: 10.1126/science.aaf4918
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728