Person:

Duan, Bo

Loading...
Profile Picture

Email Address

AA Acceptance Date

Birth Date

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Job Title

Last Name

Duan

First Name

Bo

Name

Duan, Bo

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication

    Activity-dependent silencing reveals functionally distinct itch-generating sensory neurons

    (2013) Roberson, David; Gudes, Sagi; Sprague, Jared; Patoski, Haley A. W.; Robson, Victoria K.; Blasl, Felix; Duan, Bo; Oh, Seog Bae; Bean, Bruce; Ma, Qiufu; Binshtok, Alexander M.; Woolf, Clifford

    The peripheral terminals of primary sensory neurons detect histamine and non-histamine itch-provoking ligands through molecularly distinct transduction mechanisms. It remains unclear, however, whether these distinct pruritogens activate the same or different afferent fibers. We utilized a strategy of reversibly silencing specific subsets of murine pruritogen-sensitive sensory axons by targeted delivery of a charged sodium-channel blocker and found that functional blockade of histamine itch did not affect the itch evoked by chloroquine or SLIGRL-NH2, and vice versa. Notably, blocking itch-generating fibers did not reduce pain-associated behavior. However, silencing TRPV1+ or TRPA1+ neurons allowed AITC or capsaicin respectively to evoke itch, implying that certain peripheral afferents may normally indirectly inhibit algogens from eliciting itch. These findings support the presence of functionally distinct sets of itch-generating neurons and suggest that targeted silencing of activated sensory fibers may represent a clinically useful anti-pruritic therapeutic approach for histaminergic and non-histaminergic pruritus.

  • Publication

    Identification of spinal circuits involved in touch-evoked dynamic mechanical pain

    (2017) Cheng, Longzhen; Duan, Bo; Huang, Tianwen; Zhang, Yan; Chen, Yangyang; Britz, Olivier; Garcia-Campmany, Lidia; Ren, Xiangyu; Vong, Linh; Lowell, Bradford; Goulding, Martyn; Wang, Yun; Ma, Qiufu

    Mechanical hypersensitivity is a debilitating symptom associated with millions of chronic pain patients. It exists in distinct forms, including brush-evoked dynamic and filament-evoked punctate. Here we report that dynamic mechanical hypersensitivity induced by nerve injury or inflammation was compromised in mice with ablation of spinal VT3Lbx1 neurons defined by coexpression of VGLUT3Cre and Lbx1Flpo, as indicated by the loss of brush-evoked nocifensive responses and conditional place aversion. Electrophysiological recordings show that VT3Lbx1 neurons form morphine-resistant polysynaptic pathways relaying inputs from low-threshold Aβ mechanoreceptors to lamina I output neurons. Meanwhile, the subset of somatostatin (SOM) lineage neurons preserved in VT3Lbx1 neuron-ablated mice is largely sufficient to mediate von Frey filament-evoked punctate mechanical hypersensitivity, including both morphine-sensitive and morphine-resistant forms. Furthermore, acute silencing of VT3Lbx1 neurons attenuated pre-established dynamic mechanical hypersensitivity induced by nerve injury, suggesting these neurons as a potential cellular target for treating this form of neuropathic pain.