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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 15, 2002, 22(10):4103-4113
Projection Neurons in Lamina I of Rat Spinal Cord with the
Neurokinin 1 Receptor Are Selectively Innervated by Substance
P-Containing Afferents and Respond to Noxious Stimulation
Andrew J.
Todd1,
Zita
Puskár1, 2,
Rosemary C.
Spike1,
Catriona
Hughes1,
Christine
Watt1, and
Lisa
Forrest1
1 Spinal Cord Group, Institute of Biomedical and Life
Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United
Kingdom, and 2 Department of Anatomy, Histology and
Embryology, Faculty of Medicine, Semmelweis University, Budapest,
H-1094, Hungary
Lamina I of the spinal cord is densely innervated by nociceptive
primary afferents, many of which contain substance P. It contains
numerous projection neurons: the majority of these respond to noxious
stimuli, however some are activated by cooling. In the rat, ~80% of
the projection neurons express the neurokinin 1 (NK1) receptor, on
which substance P acts, and most cells with this receptor are activated
by noxious stimuli. Lamina I neurons can be classified morphologically
into pyramidal, multipolar, and fusiform types. It has been reported in
the cat that pyramidal neurons are activated only by cooling and that
in monkey relatively few pyramidal cells are NK1
receptor-immunoreactive.
We have used immunocytochemistry to examine the innervation of lamina I
projection neurons in the rat by substance P-containing primary
afferents and their responses to a noxious stimulus (subcutaneous formalin injection). NK1 receptor-immunoreactive projection cells received a significantly higher density of contacts from substance P-containing afferents than neurons that lacked the receptor. Most
contacts on NK1 receptor-immunoreactive cells were associated with
synapses. Formalin injection induced c-Fos in ~80% of projection neurons with the NK1 receptor and in 25-45% of those without it. More
than 80% of pyramidal neurons expressed the receptor, and for both
substance P innervation and c-Fos expression there were no
significant differences among different morphological types of NK1
receptor-immunoreactive neuron.
We conclude that presence or absence of the NK1 receptor is a better
indicator of function than morphology for lamina I projection neurons
in the rat.
Key words:
pain; c-Fos; confocal microscopy; electron microscopy; synapse; calcitonin gene-related peptide
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/22104103-11$05.00/0
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