Cell Reports (Apr 2023)

c-Maf-positive spinal cord neurons are critical elements of a dorsal horn circuit for mechanical hypersensitivity in neuropathy

  • Noémie Frezel,
  • Matteo Ranucci,
  • Edmund Foster,
  • Hagen Wende,
  • Pawel Pelczar,
  • Raquel Mendes,
  • Robert P. Ganley,
  • Karolina Werynska,
  • Simon d’Aquin,
  • Camilla Beccarini,
  • Carmen Birchmeier,
  • Hanns Ulrich Zeilhofer,
  • Hendrik Wildner

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 4
p. 112295

Abstract

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Summary: Corticospinal tract (CST) neurons innervate the deep spinal dorsal horn to sustain chronic neuropathic pain. The majority of neurons targeted by the CST are interneurons expressing the transcription factor c-Maf. Here, we used intersectional genetics to decipher the function of these neurons in dorsal horn sensory circuits. We find that excitatory c-Maf (c-MafEX) neurons receive sensory input mainly from myelinated fibers and target deep dorsal horn parabrachial projection neurons and superficial dorsal horn neurons, thereby connecting non-nociceptive input to nociceptive output structures. Silencing c-MafEX neurons has little effect in healthy mice but alleviates mechanical hypersensitivity in neuropathic mice. c-MafEX neurons also receive input from inhibitory c-Maf and parvalbumin neurons, and compromising inhibition by these neurons caused mechanical hypersensitivity and spontaneous aversive behaviors reminiscent of c-MafEX neuron activation. Our study identifies c-MafEX neurons as normally silent second-order nociceptors that become engaged in pathological pain signaling upon loss of inhibitory control.

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