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Publication : A Brainstem-Spinal Circuit Controlling Nocifensive Behavior.

First Author  Barik A Year  2018
Journal  Neuron Volume  100
Issue  6 Pages  1491-1503.e3
PubMed ID  30449655 Mgi Jnum  J:269832
Mgi Id  MGI:6269204 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2018.10.037
Citation  Barik A, et al. (2018) A Brainstem-Spinal Circuit Controlling Nocifensive Behavior. Neuron 100(6):1491-1503.e3
abstractText  Response to danger needs to be rapid and appropriate. In humans, nocifensive behaviors often precede conscious pain perception. Much is known about local spinal cord circuits for simple reflexive responses, but the mechanisms underlying more complex behaviors remain poorly understood. We now describe a brainstem circuit that controls escape responses to select noxious stimuli. Tracing experiments characterized a highly interconnected excitatory circuit involving the dorsal spinal cord, parabrachial nucleus (PBNl), and reticular formation (MdD). A combination of chemogenetic, optogenetic, and genetic ablation approaches revealed that PBNl(Tac1) neurons are activated by noxious stimuli and trigger robust escape responses to heat through connections to the MdD. Remarkably, MdD(Tac1) neurons receive excitatory input from the PBN and target both the spinal cord and PBN; activation of these neurons phenocopies the behavioral effects of PBNl(Tac1) neuron stimulation. These findings identify a substrate for controlling appropriate behavioral responses to painful stimuli.
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