[HTML][HTML] Characterisation of NPFF-expressing neurons in the superficial dorsal horn of the mouse spinal cord

R Quillet, AC Dickie, E Polgár, M Gutierrez-Mecinas… - Scientific Reports, 2023 - nature.com
R Quillet, AC Dickie, E Polgár, M Gutierrez-Mecinas, AM Bell, L Goffin, M Watanabe…
Scientific Reports, 2023nature.com
Excitatory interneurons in the superficial dorsal horn (SDH) are heterogeneous, and include
a class known as vertical cells, which convey information to lamina I projection neurons. We
recently used pro-NPFF antibody to reveal a discrete population of excitatory interneurons
that express neuropeptide FF (NPFF). Here, we generated a new mouse line (NPFFCre) in
which Cre is knocked into the Npff locus, and used Cre-dependent viruses and reporter mice
to characterise NPFF cell properties. Both viral and reporter strategies labelled many cells in …
Abstract
Excitatory interneurons in the superficial dorsal horn (SDH) are heterogeneous, and include a class known as vertical cells, which convey information to lamina I projection neurons. We recently used pro-NPFF antibody to reveal a discrete population of excitatory interneurons that express neuropeptide FF (NPFF). Here, we generated a new mouse line (NPFFCre) in which Cre is knocked into the Npff locus, and used Cre-dependent viruses and reporter mice to characterise NPFF cell properties. Both viral and reporter strategies labelled many cells in the SDH, and captured most pro-NPFF-immunoreactive neurons (75–80%). However, the majority of labelled cells lacked pro-NPFF, and we found considerable overlap with a population of neurons that express the gastrin-releasing peptide receptor (GRPR). Morphological reconstruction revealed that most pro-NPFF-containing neurons were vertical cells, but these differed from GRPR neurons (which are also vertical cells) in having a far higher dendritic spine density. Electrophysiological recording showed that NPFF cells also differed from GRPR cells in having a higher frequency of miniature EPSCs, being more electrically excitable and responding to a NPY Y1 receptor agonist. Together, these findings indicate that there are at least two distinct classes of vertical cells, which may have differing roles in somatosensory processing.
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