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Chronic pain is a debilitating condition that shades the lives of approximately 20%
of the global population. Patients with chronic pain often display impairments in
cognitive function, such as cognitive inflexibility, that negatively affect treatment
efficacy. Understanding the mechanism underlying chronic pain and its behavioral impacts
is therefore crucial for the development of successful treatments on symptoms beyond
the physical aspect. However, current study on the circuitous underpinning of pain-associated
behavioral inflexibility is still insufficient. Chronic pain is associated with a
hypodopaminergic state in patients and animal models; the medial prefrontal cortex
(mPFC) and nucleus accumbens shell (NAcSh) are two brain regions that receive dense
dopaminergic innervation, and dopamine exquisitely modulates synaptic plasticity and
excitability in this pathway. Projections from the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)
to nucleus accumbens shell (NAcSh) specifically are essential for encoding reward
associations and flexibly updating behavior in response to reward. Therefore, we hypothesize
that a pain-associated hypodopaminergic state would modulate function of the mPFC–NAcSh
pathway and lead to impairment in reward-related behavioral flexibility. Whether maladaptive
plasticity of the mPFC–NAc pathway contributes to the behavioral inflexibility associated
with chronic pain has not been well understood. Here, we will test the hypothesis
that decreased synaptic strength of the mPFC–NAcSh pathway leads to decreased reward-based
effort allocation following induction of a chronic pain and impaired behavioral flexibility
under conditions of reward uncertainty. These behavioral deficits were associated
with decreased excitatory synaptic transmission into the nucleus accumbens in a cell-type-specific
manner, providing a potential neural substrate of these effects. Together, these results
provide evidence linking a pain-associated hypodopaminergic state to downstream dopamine-dependent
adaptations in cortico-striatal circuits that could contribute to impairments in reward-based
behavior. In the future, it is possible that this pathway could be harnessed for neuromodulation
strategies to treat cognitive or affective symptoms of chronic pain. Grant support
from Rita Allen Scholar Award in Pain (to M.C.C.).
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© 2022 Published by Elsevier Inc.