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Glutamatergic synapses from the insular cortex to the basolateral amygdala encode observational pain

Cited 36 time in Web of Science Cited 42 time in Scopus
Authors

Zhang, Ming-Ming; Geng, An-Qi; Chen, Kun; Wang, Jian; Wang, Pan; Qiu, Xin-Tong; Gu, Jun-Xiang; Fan, Hong-Wei; Zhu, Da-Yu; Yang, Shan-Ming; Chen, Qi-Yu; Zhou, Zhao-Xiang; Fan, Bo-Yuan; Bai, Yang; Xing, Ke-Ke; Feng, Jia-Ming; Wang, Jun-Da; Chen, Yan; Lu, Ya-Cheng; Liang, Ying; Cao, Peng; Kaang, Bong-Kiun; Zhuo, Min; Li, Yun-Qing; Chen, Tao

Issue Date
2022-06
Publisher
Cell Press
Citation
Neuron, Vol.110 No.12, pp.1993-2008.e6
Abstract
© 2022 Elsevier Inc.Empathic pain has attracted the interest of a substantial number of researchers studying the social transfer of pain in the sociological, psychological, and neuroscience fields. However, the neural mechanism of empathic pain remains elusive. Here, we establish a long-term observational pain model in mice and find that glutamatergic projection from the insular cortex (IC) to the basolateral amygdala (BLA) is critical for the formation of observational pain. The selective activation or inhibition of the IC-BLA projection pathway strengthens or weakens the intensity of observational pain, respectively. The synaptic molecules are screened, and the upregulated synaptotagmin-2 and RIM3 are identified as key signals in controlling the increased synaptic glutamate transmission from the IC to the BLA. Together, these results reveal the molecular and synaptic mechanisms of a previously unidentified neural pathway that regulates observational pain in mice.
ISSN
0896-6273
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/185143
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2022.03.030
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