PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Salk and Harvard scientists chart spinal circuitry responsible for chronic pain

Salk and Harvard scientists chart spinal circuitry responsible for chronic pain
2014-12-05
(Press-News.org) LA JOLLA-Pain typically has a clear cause-but not always. When a person touches something hot or bumps into a sharp object, it's no surprise that it hurts. But for people with certain chronic pain disorders, including fibromyalgia and phantom limb pain, a gentle caress can result in agony.

In a major breakthrough, a team led by researchers at the Salk Institute and Harvard Medical School have identified an important neural mechanism in the spinal cord that appears to be capable of sending erroneous pain signals to the brain.

By charting the spinal circuits that process and transmit pain signals in mice, the study, published online November 20, 2014 in Cell, lays the groundwork for identifying ways to treat pain disorders that have no clear physical cause.

"Until now, the spinal cord circuitry involved in processing pain has remained a black box," says Martyn Goulding, Salk professor in the Molecular Neurobiology Laboratory and a co-senior author of the paper. "Identifying the neurons that make up these circuits is the first step in understanding how chronic pain stems from dysfunctional neural processing."

In many instances, people who suffer from chronic pain are sensitive to stimuli that don't normally cause pain, such as a light touch to the hand or a subtle change in skin temperature. These conditions, referred to generally as forms of allodynia, include fibromyalgia and nerve damage that is caused by diseases such as diabetes, cancer and autoimmune disorders.

In other instances, the mysterious pain arises after amputation of a limb, which often leads to discomfort that seems to be centered on the missing appendage. These sensations often subside in the months following the amputation, but may linger indefinitely, causing long-term chronic pain for the sufferer.

"These disorders are extremely frustrating for patients, because there is still no effective treatment for such chronic pain disorders," says Qiufu Ma, a professor of neurobiology at Harvard Medical School and co-senior author on the paper.

Scientists have long theorized that pain signals are sent from sensory neurons in the limbs and other extremities to transmission neurons in the spinal cord, which then relay the information to the brain. At each of these three steps-extremities, spinal cord and brain-the pain information can be altered or even blocked before being relayed onward through the nervous system to the brain. The circuitry in the spinal cord is particularly important, as it is able to gate painful stimuli, thereby acting as a checkpoint between the body and the brain to make sure that only the most important pain signals are transmitted.

Previous studies had determined that two types of sensory neurons appeared to be involved in these circuits: pain receptors and touch receptors.

In their new study, the Salk and Harvard researchers set out to precisely identify the spinal neurons involved in these circuits. They deciphered the role each of two neuronal cell types play in the processing of pain signals in the dorsal horn, the location where the sensory neurons connect with the spinal cord.

The scientists discovered that a class of mechanoreceptors in the skin that detect painful mechanical stimuli are part of a feedback circuit in which excitatory neurons that produce the hormone somatostatin are inhibited by neurons that synthesize dynorphin (a natural analgesic molecule that produces effects similar to opiates). The inhibitory neurons they identified appear to control whether touch activates the excitatory neurons to send a pain signal to the brain.

This finding begins to explain how a light touch can cause discomfort in someone with allodynia: if something is awry in the pain circuitry, then the sensations of touch that normally travels through the mechanoreceptors could instead activate other neurons that trigger a pain signal. Similarly, mechanoreceptor fibers that project to the spinal cord from a missing limb might spur erroneous pain signals.

"Normally, only pain receptors are involved in sending pain signals to the brain, but when the spinal dynorphin inhibitory neurons are lost, touch sensation are now perceived as painful," says Goulding, holder of Salk's Frederick W. and Joanna J. Mitchell Chair. "This really opens the door to understanding what's happening in these pain disorders where the cause of the pain is seemingly innocuous or not known. It could be that something has gone awry in how this spinal circuitry is operating, so sensations become jumbled together and emerge as pain."

INFORMATION:

Other researchers on the paper include Bo Duan, Longzhen Cheng, Xiangyu Ren, Michael Krashes, Wendy Knowlton and Bradford B. Lowell of Harvard Medical School; Steeve Bourane, Olivier Britz, Christopher Padilla, Lidia Garcia-Campmany and Tomoko Velasquez of Salk Institute; Sarah E. Ross of University of Pittsburgh; and Yun Wang of Fudan University, China.

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Natural Science Foundation of China.

About the Salk Institute for Biological Studies: The Salk Institute for Biological Studies is one of the world's preeminent basic research institutions, where internationally renowned faculty probes fundamental life science questions in a unique, collaborative, and creative environment. Focused both on discovery and on mentoring future generations of researchers, Salk scientists make groundbreaking contributions to our understanding of cancer, aging, Alzheimer's, diabetes and infectious diseases by studying neuroscience, genetics, cell and plant biology, and related disciplines.

Faculty achievements have been recognized with numerous honors, including Nobel Prizes and memberships in the National Academy of Sciences. Founded in 1960 by polio vaccine pioneer Jonas Salk, MD, the Institute is an independent nonprofit organization and architectural landmark.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Salk and Harvard scientists chart spinal circuitry responsible for chronic pain

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Don't worry, be happy; just go to bed earlier

2014-12-05
When you go to bed and how long you sleep at a time might actually make it difficult for you to stop worrying, according to researchers at Binghamton University. The study, led by Binghamton Anxiety Clinic Director Meredith Coles and graduate student Jacob Nota, found that people who sleep for shorter periods of time and go to bed very late at night are often overwhelmed with more negative thoughts than those who keep more regular sleeping hours. The findings appear in Springer's journal Cognitive Therapy and Research, being published this month. People are said to have ...

45-year physics mystery shows a path to quantum transistors

2014-12-05
ANN ARBOR--An odd, iridescent material that's puzzled physicists for decades turns out to be an exotic state of matter that could open a new path to quantum computers and other next-generation electronics. Physicists at the University of Michigan have discovered or confirmed several properties of the compound samarium hexaboride that raise hopes for finding the silicon of the quantum era. They say their results also close the case of how to classify the material--a mystery that has been investigated since the late 1960s. The researchers provide the first direct evidence ...

Promising compound rapidly eliminates malaria parasite

2014-12-05
(MEMPHIS, Tenn. - December 5, 2014) An international research collaborative has determined that a promising anti-malarial compound tricks the immune system to rapidly destroy red blood cells infected with the malaria parasite but leave healthy cells unharmed. St. Jude Children's Research Hospital scientists led the study, which appears in the current online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). The compound, (+)-SJ733, was developed from a molecule identified in a previous St. Jude-led study that helped to jumpstart worldwide anti-malarial ...

Cerebral oxygenation in elite Kenyan athletes

2014-12-05
This news release is available in Spanish. This is a pioneering study in the world of the physiology of exercise, given that it describes for the first time that elite Kenyan athletes have greater brain oxygenation during periods of maximum physical effort, and which contributes to their success in long-distance races. Doctor Jordan Santos-Concejero, of the Department of Physical Education and Sport at the UPV/EHU, carried out research the aim of which was to analyse the response of cerebral oxygenation at maximum and progressive rhythms amongst elite Kenyan runners ...

New technique offers spray-on solar power

2014-12-05
Pretty soon, powering your tablet could be as simple as wrapping it in cling wrap. That's Illan Kramer's hope. Kramer and colleagues have just invented a new way to spray solar cells onto flexible surfaces using miniscule light-sensitive materials known as colloidal quantum dots (CQDs)--a major step toward making spray-on solar cells easy and cheap to manufacture. "My dream is that one day you'll have two technicians with Ghostbusters backpacks come to your house and spray your roof," says Kramer, a post-doctoral fellow with The Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical ...

Obesity -- like father, like son

2014-12-05
This news release is available in German. The consumption of a sugary banquet before sex can have far-reaching consequences for a fruit fly and its offspring: it makes the young flies more prone to obesity. Together with researchers from Spain and Sweden, scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics in Freiburg have discovered that even a brief change in the diet of male fruit flies triggers obesity in the next generation. Specifically, high-sugar nutrition consumed one to two days before mating causes the male offspring to accumulate more ...

Computers that teach by example

2014-12-05
Computers are good at identifying patterns in huge data sets. Humans, by contrast, are good at inferring patterns from just a few examples. In a paper appearing at the Neural Information Processing Society's conference next week, MIT researchers present a new system that bridges these two ways of processing information, so that humans and computers can collaborate to make better decisions. The system learns to make judgments by crunching data but distills what it learns into simple examples. In experiments, human subjects using the system were more than 20 percent better ...

Evidence for 'bilingual advantage' may be less conclusive than previously thought

2014-12-05
Study results that challenge the idea that bilingual speakers have a cognitive advantage are less likely to be published than those that support the bilingual-advantage theory, according to new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. This research suggests that a publication bias in favor of positive results may skew the overall literature on bilingualism and cognitive function. "Publishing only 'successful' studies means that we do not have access to many valuable studies that could increase our understanding ...

Significant increase in concussions among Ontario children and youth: York U study

2014-12-05
Toronto, Dec. 5, 2014 - The number of children and youth treated for concussions in both emergency departments and physician's offices in Ontario increased significantly between 2003 and 2010, with falls, hockey and skating injuries identified as the leading causes of pediatric concussion, according to a new joint study out of York University and the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES). The study," A population-based study of pediatric emergency department and office visits for concussions from 2003 to 2010", published today in the journal Paediatrics & ...

Even the perceived risk of disease prompts intention to act

2014-12-05
With so much focus on risk factors for disease, we are living in an era of surveillance medicine, in which the emphasis on risk blurs the lines between health and illness, argue researchers at Yale and Syracuse universities in a study published in the December issue of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior. Co-authors Rene Almeling, assistant professor of sociology at Yale, and Shana Kushner Gadarian, assistant professor of political science at Syracuse University, conducted a nationwide survey of American adults to determine if healthy people react to hypothetical ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UNC researchers identify potential treatment for Angelman syndrome

Study: Weaker ocean circulation could enhance CO2 buildup in the atmosphere

Brain size riddle solved as humans exceed evolution trend

GeneMAP discovery platform will help define functions for ‘orphan’ metabolic proteins

Zero-emissions trucks alone won't cut it: Early retirement of polluters key to California's emission goals

Hexagonal perovskite oxides: Electrolytes for next-generation protonic ceramic fuel cells

Genomic data integration improves prediction accuracy of apple fruit traits!

Visualizing short-lived intermediate compounds produced during chemical reactions

It’s time to rethink our attitude to fatness, academic argues

Braiding community values with science is key to ecosystem restoration

Study of key characteristics of politicians reveals ‘ambition, narcissism, genuine idealism’ among common traits

Air pollution linked to a decrease in IVF birth rate success, new study shows

Gestational carriers face higher health risks during pregnancy compared to IVF and natural conceptions, new study shows

Novel treatment improves embryo implantation and live birth rates in infertile women undergoing IVF and ICSI

Scientists create first mouse model with complete, functional human immune system

SIAM Conference on Mathematics of Data Science (MDS24)

Thousands of high-risk cancer gene variants identified

Texas Tech professor receives DOE grant to advance clean energy

Researchers find biological clues to mental health impacts of prenatal cannabis exposure

Self-driving technology: improving safety through sound

Cranfield and LIPTON Teas and Infusions begin advanced climate change mitigation and resilience field trials

Engage in strategic discussions at Targeting EVs 2024: Program released with stimulating questions

Smoking a key lifestyle factor linked to cognitive decline among older adults

Current strategies ineffective in controlling Salmonella Dublin in Danish cattle

Military service's hidden health toll: servicewomen and their families endure increased chronic pain

Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists and 13 obesity-associated cancers in patients with type 2 diabetes

Medicare eligibility and changes in coverage, access to care, and health by sexual orientation and gender identity

TaSRT2 recognizes a viral protein to activate host immunity by increasing histone acetylation

TBC1D1 is an energy-responsive polarization regulator of macrophages via governing ROS production in obesity

Gerhard Ertl Lecture Award 2024 goes to Graham Hutchings

[Press-News.org] Salk and Harvard scientists chart spinal circuitry responsible for chronic pain