PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Curtis A. Benson AU - Keith K. Fenrich AU - Kai-Lan Olson AU - Siraj Patwa AU - Lakshmi Bangalore AU - Stephen G. Waxman AU - Andrew M. Tan TI - Dendritic Spine Dynamics after Peripheral Nerve Injury: An Intravital Structural Study AID - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2858-19.2020 DP - 2020 May 27 TA - The Journal of Neuroscience PG - 4297--4308 VI - 40 IP - 22 4099 - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/40/22/4297.short 4100 - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/40/22/4297.full SO - J. Neurosci.2020 May 27; 40 AB - Neuropathic pain is an intractable medical condition with few or no options for effective treatment. Emerging evidence shows a strong structure-function relationship between dendritic spine dysgenesis and the presence of neuropathic pain. Postmortem tissue analyses can only imply dynamic structural changes associated with injury-induced pain. Here, we profiled the in vivo dynamics of dendritic spines over time on the same superficial dorsal horn (lamina II) neurons before and after peripheral nerve injury-induced pain. We used a two-photon, whole-animal imaging paradigm that permitted repeat imaging of the same dendritic branches of these neurons in C57/Bl6 Thy1-YFP male mice. Our study demonstrates, for the first time, the ongoing, steady-state changes in dendritic spine dynamics in the dorsal horn associated with peripheral nerve injury and pain. Ultimately, the relationship between altered dendritic spine dynamics and neuropathic pain may serve as a structure-based opportunity to investigate mechanisms of pain following injury and disease.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT This work is important because it demonstrates for the first time: (1) the powerful utility of intravital study of dendritic spine dynamics in the superficial dorsal horn; (2) that nerve injury-induced pain triggers changes in dendritic spine steady-state behavior in the spinal cord dorsal horn; and (3) this work opens the door to further investigations in vivo of spinal cord dendritic spine dynamics in the context of injury and disease.