Gate control of mechanical itch by a subpopulation of spinal cord interneurons.

Journal: Science (New York, N.Y.)
Published:
Abstract

Light mechanical stimulation of hairy skin can induce a form of itch known as mechanical itch. This itch sensation is normally suppressed by inputs from mechanoreceptors; however, in many forms of chronic itch, including alloknesis, this gating mechanism is lost. Here we demonstrate that a population of spinal inhibitory interneurons that are defined by the expression of neuropeptide Y::Cre (NPY::Cre) act to gate mechanical itch. Mice in which dorsal NPY::Cre-derived neurons are selectively ablated or silenced develop mechanical itch without an increase in sensitivity to chemical itch or pain. This chronic itch state is histamine-independent and is transmitted independently of neurons that express the gastrin-releasing peptide receptor. Thus, our studies reveal a dedicated spinal cord inhibitory pathway that gates the transmission of mechanical itch.

Authors
Steeve Bourane, Bo Duan, Stephanie Koch, Antoine Dalet, Olivier Britz, Lidia Garcia Campmany, Euiseok Kim, Longzhen Cheng, Anirvan Ghosh, Qiufu Ma, Martyn Goulding