Abstract

The amygdala is critical for the production of appropriate responses towards emotional or stressful stimuli. It has a characteristic neuronal activation pattern to acute stressors. Chronic pain and acute stress have each been shown to independently modulate the activity of the amygdala. Few studies have investigated the effect of pain or injury, on amygdala activation to acute stress. This study investigated the effects of a neuropathic injury on the activation response of the amygdala to an acute restraint stress. Chronic constriction injury of the right sciatic nerve (CCI) was used to create neuropathic injury and a single brief 15-min acute restraint was used as an emotional/psychological stressor. All rats received cholera toxin B (CTB) retrograde tracer injections into the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) to assess if the amygdala to mPFC pathway was specifically regulated by the combination of neuropathic injury and acute stress. To assess differential patterns of activity in amygdala subregions, cFos expression was used as a marker for "acute", restraint triggered neuronal activation, and FosB/ΔFosB expression was used to reveal prolonged neuronal activation/sensitisation triggered by CCI. Restraint resulted in a characteristic increase in cFos expression in the medial amygdala, which was not altered by CCI. Rats with a CCI showed increased cFos expression in the basolateral amygdala (BLA), in response to an acute restraint stress, but not in neurons projecting to the prefrontal cortex. Further, CCI rats showed an increase in FosB/ΔFosB expression which was exclusive to the BLA. This increase likely reflects sensitisation of the BLA as a consequence of nerve injury which may contribute to heightened sensitivity of BLA neurons to acute emotional/ psychological stressors.

Highlights

  • The amygdala plays a critical role in the integration of sensory and emotional information to co-ordinate an individual’s response to stress (LeDoux, 2000)

  • The aims of this study were to use the immunohistochemical detection of the expression of the protein products of the Fos-family immediate-early genes, and to use their different temporal expression profiles to investigate whether peripheral nerve injury using chronic constriction injury of the sciatic nerve (CCI), a model of neuropathic pain, can alter the neuronal activation of the amygdala triggered by acute stress

  • This study investigated the effects of neuropathic injury (CCI) on acute restraint stress evoked cFos expression in the amygdala and whether there is increased cFos expression in amygdala projections to the medial prefrontal cortex

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Summary

Introduction

The amygdala plays a critical role in the integration of sensory and emotional information to co-ordinate an individual’s response to stress (LeDoux, 2000). It has been suggested that disruptions of the excitatory state of amygdala neurons can facilitate the transition from the acute to chronic pain state (Usdin and Dimitrov, 2016) and a number of studies have provided evidence of significant changes in the activity of CeA and BLA neurons following sciatic nerve injury (Jiang et al, 2014), and inflammatory pain (Ji and Neugebauer, 2011, Ji et al, 2010). These changes in activity have been shown to correspond with changes in both affective and cognitive behaviours. Nerve-injury evoked alterations of activity in this specific pathway may well contribute to the changes in affective and cognitive behaviours that characterise the chronic pain state

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