학술논문

A Midbrain Circuit that Mediates Headache Aversiveness in Rats
Document Type
article
Source
Cell Reports. 28(11)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Migraines
Headaches
Neurosciences
Pain Research
Chronic Pain
Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease
Substance Misuse
Neurological
Good Health and Well Being
Animals
Headache
Male
Migraine Disorders
Neural Pathways
Neurons
Oncogene Proteins v-fos
Periaqueductal Gray
Rats
Rats
Sprague-Dawley
Synapses
Time Factors
Ventral Tegmental Area
headache
migraine
periaqueductal gray
ventral tegmental area
ventrolateral PAG
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Medical Physiology
Biological sciences
Language
Abstract
Migraines are a major health burden, but treatment is limited because of inadequate understanding of neural mechanisms underlying headache. Imaging studies of migraine patients demonstrate changes in both pain-modulatory circuits and reward-processing regions, but whether these changes contribute to the experience of headache is unknown. Here, we demonstrate a direct connection between the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (vlPAG) and the ventral tegmental area (VTA) that contributes to headache aversiveness in rats. Many VTA neurons receive monosynaptic input from the vlPAG, and cranial nociceptive input increases Fos expression in VTA-projecting vlPAG neurons. Activation of PAG inputs to the VTA induces avoidance behavior, while inactivation of these projections induces a place preference only in animals with headache. This work identifies a distinct pathway that mediates cranial nociceptive aversiveness.