Abstract

Pain is comprised of both sensory and affective components. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is a key brain region involved in the emotional processing of pain. Specifically, glutamatergic transmission within the ACC has been shown to modulate pain-related aversion. In the present study, we use in vivo optogenetics to activate or silence, using channelrhodopsin (ChR2) and archaerhodopsin (ArchT) respectively, calmodulin-kinase IIα (CaMKIIα)-expressing excitatory glutamatergic neurons of the ACC during a formalin-induced conditioned place aversion (F-CPA) behavioral paradigm in both female and male adult Sprague-Dawley rats. Expression of c-Fos, a marker of neuronal activity, was assessed within the ACC using immunohistochemistry. Optogenetic inhibition of glutamatergic neurons of the ACC abolished F-CPA without affecting formalin-induced nociceptive behavior during conditioning. In male rats, optogenetic activation of ACC glutamatergic neurons decreased formalin-induced nociceptive behavior during conditioning without affecting F-CPA. Interestingly, the opposite effect was seen in females, where optogenetic activation of glutamatergic neurons of the ACC increased formalin-induced nociceptive behavior during conditioning. The abolition of F-CPA following optogenetic inhibition of glutamatergic neurons of the ACC was associated with a reduction in c-Fos immunoreactivity in the ACC in male rats, but not female rats. These results suggest that excitatory glutamatergic neurons of the ACC play differential and sex-dependent roles in the aversion learning and acute sensory components of pain.

Highlights

  • Pain is comprised of both sensory-discriminative and affective-motivational components, which have distinct roles in the pain experience and can often modulate one another

  • Post hoc analysis revealed that optogenetic activation (ChR2) of glutamatergic neurons in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) significantly reduced (p < 0.05 or 0.01) formalin-evoked nociceptive behavior in male rats compared to controls at time bins 9 and 11 of the formalin trial (Figure 3A)

  • In female rats, optogenetic activation (ChR2) of glutamatergic neurons significantly increased (p < 0.05 or 0.01) formalin-evoked nociceptive behavior compared to controls at time bins 7–9 (Figure 3B)

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Summary

Introduction

Pain is comprised of both sensory-discriminative and affective-motivational components, which have distinct roles in the pain experience and can often modulate one another. It has been found that lesion of the ACC reduces both formalin-induced conditioned place aversion (F-CPA) and visceral pain-induced CPA, pre-clinical behavioral paradigms used to investigate the affective component of pain, without affecting nociceptive responding (Johansen et al, 2001; Gao et al, 2004; Yan et al, 2012). Glutamatergic transmission and the expression of glutamatergic receptors in the ACC are increased in animal models of pain (Xu et al, 2008; Chen et al, 2014; Li W. et al, 2014; Yi et al, 2014; Hubbard et al, 2015; Liu et al, 2015), as well as clinically in patients with chronic pain conditions (Kameda et al, 2017; Lv et al, 2018). Glutamatergic transmission within the ACC plays an important role in CPA

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