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Papers of the Week


Papers: 13 Feb 2021 - 19 Feb 2021


Animal Studies


2021 Feb 16


JCI Insight

Vagal gut-brain signaling mediates amygdaloid plasticity, affect and pain in a functional dyspepsia model.

Authors

Cordner ZA, Li Q, Liu L, Tamashiro KL, Bhargava A, Moran TH, Pasricha PJ
JCI Insight. 2021 Feb 16.
PMID: 33591956.

Abstract

Functional dyspepsia (FD) is associated with both chronic gastrointestinal distress and anxiety and depression. Here, we hypothesized that aberrant gastric signals, transmitted by the vagus nerve, may alter key brain regions modulating affective and pain behavior. Using a previously validated rat model of FD characterized by gastric hypersensitivity, depression- and anxiety-like behavior, we found that vagal activity in response to gastric distention was increased in FD rats. The FD phenotype was associated with gastric mast cell hyperplasia and increased expression of corticotrophin-releasing factor (CRF) and decreased brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the central amygdala. Subdiaphragmatic vagotomy reversed these changes and restored affective behavior to that of controls. Vagotomy partially attenuated pain responses to gastric distention, which may be mediated by central reflexes in the periaqueductal gray, as determined by local injection of lidocaine. Ketotifen, a mast cell stabilizer, reduced vagal hypersensitivity, normalized affective behavior and attenuated gastric hyperalgesia. In conclusion, vagal activity, partially driven by gastric mast cells, induces long-lasting changes in CRF signaling in the amygdala that may be responsible for enhanced pain and anxiety- and depression-like behaviors. Together, these results support a "bottom-up" pathway involving the gut-brain axis in the pathogenesis of both gastric pain and psychiatric co-morbidity in FD.