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Papers of the Week


Papers: 1 Mar 2025 - 7 Mar 2025


2025 Mar 03


J Invest Dermatol


40043789

Glutamatergic projections from the basolateral amygdala to medial prefrontal cortex contribute to acute itch sensation processing.

Authors

Zhao Q, Fan Z, Zhang Y, Li J, Zhu Y, Lin Y, Ni Q, Shi X, Liu L, Wu S, Huang J

Abstract

Itch refers to an aversive sensation that generates a desire to scratch. The basolateral amygdala (BLA) activity is crucial in driving motivation, sensation, and emotional responses. Excitatory projections from the BLA play a vital role in turning neuronal activity throughout the brain, including the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Nevertheless, whether the BLA neurons and BLA-mPFC circuit contribute to itch sensation remains elusive. In this study, fluoro-gold retrograde tracing, morphological staining and neuronal manipulation approaches were employed to investigate the role of BLA-mPFC projections in itch processing. Results showed that glutamatergic neurons in the BLA were activated in response to histamine- and chloroquine-induced acute itch stimuli. Chemogenetic activation of these neurons significantly mitigated the scratching behavior, while their inhibition increased the number of scratching bouts. The percentages of fluoro-gold-labeled CaMKII neurons expressing FOS in the BLA, which projecting to the mPFC, were 40.10±2.26% and 73.84±6.48% in acute itch models induced by histamine and chloroquine, respectively. Optogenetic activation of the BLA-mPFC pathway reduced histamine or chloroquine-induced scratching bouts, whereas its inhibition increased the scratching bouts. These results provide evidence that BLA-mPFC projections are implicated in the acute itch processing, expanding our understanding to the circuit mechanism underlying the modulation of itch.