1. Introduction
Pain is a multidimensional experience, which remains a major challenge in terms of understanding fundamental mechanisms as well as therapeutic management. Chronic neuropathic pain is particularly refractory to therapy, and conventional pharmacological treatments are limited by side effects [
1]. The role of cortical plasticity in positive or negative modulation of pain is paramount [
2,
3]. Therefore, tapping into cortical circuits and modulating their participation and plasticity in chronic pain holds therapeutic promise.
Specificity in modulating neocortical circuitry is difficult to reach with pharmacological agents since they distribute broadly and act at multiple loci. These drawbacks can be counterbalanced with neurostimulation approaches applied transcranially, such as transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) or transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) [
4,
5]. Indeed, transcranial cortical stimulation is emerging as a promising therapeutic approach for refractory neuropathic pain in clinical studies [
6,
7,
8]. Despite this promise, there remain a number of concerns arising from major variations in efficacy, lack of insights into mechanistic underpinnings, and the need for optimizing the locus and regimens of neurostimulation. Studies in animal models can contribute to clarifying these important questions.
A majority of previous studies investigating neurostimulation approaches in human subjects and rodent models have focused on the motor cortex [
5,
7,
8,
9,
10], and a few new studies have also emerged on the prefrontal cortex [
11]. In contrast, the insular cortex has not been tested so far in neurostimulation studies in rodents, and to date there is no knowledge on the potential of therapies specifically targeting the insula in achieving pain relief. This is remarkable, since the insula is one of the few brain areas in which ictal discharges have been reported to directly elicit the perception of pain, while lesions of the posterior insula impair nociceptive functions, although systematic and controlled studies are lacking [
12]. A functional dichotomy has been suggested, with the posterior insular cortex participating in the somatosensory (nociceptive) features of pain and the anterior insula, preferably being involved in the affective dimensions of pain [
13,
14]. Recent studies on imaging and electrophysiological recordings in the human insula demonstrate strong activation of the posterior insula in thermal and mechanical nociception [
15,
16]. In addition to acute pain, the posterior insula has been implicated in chronic pain, with remarkable grey matter alterations being reported that are reversed upon adequate pain therapy. In models of rodent models of chronic pain, synapses in the insular cortex have been demonstrated to undergo functional plasticity [
17]. Taken together, there is ample basis to warrant analyses on targeting the insular cortex for achieving pain control.
Here, by employing direct current stimulation on the posterior insula, we sought to address whether insular stimulation positively or negatively modulates neuropathic pain in mice. Importantly, with a view towards enhancing translational promise, we tested the implications of repetitive cycles of stimulation and sought to address the cellular mechanistic basis of changes in brain excitation following insular direct current stimulation.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Animals
All experiments were conducted in C57BL/6J mice (20–30 g) of both sexes at 8 weeks of age that were obtained from Janvier Labs. In total, 31 animals were used and the sex ratio was balanced across all experiments. Mice were housed individually in separated cages and kept under a 12 h light/dark cycle at a controlled temperature (22 ± 2 °C), humidity (40–50%), and with food and water provided ad libitum according to ARRIVE guidelines. All experimental procedures were approved by the local governing body (Regierungspräsidium Karlsruhe, Germany, Ref. 35-9185.81/G-184/18, 35-9185.81/G-205/14), and was in accordance with the German law that regulates animal welfare and the protection of animals used for scientific purposes (TierSchG, TierSchVersV).
2.2. Experimental Design
Mice were allowed to recover for 3–6 days following electrode implantation. Mice were randomly divided into two groups for mechanical and cold sensitivity testing (sham treatment, repetitive PI tDCS) and were divided into another three groups for the immunohistochemistry experiments (sham treatment, single PI tDCS, repetitive PI tDCS). From 3 to 36 days following the spared nerve injury (SNI), mice underwent daily tDCS sessions for five consecutive days at an early and late stage of neuropathic pain, labelled Block I and Block II, respectively. Mechanical and cold sensitivity were assessed at one day before nerve injury, one day before the first tDCS treatment session in both blocks, and on defined days over a 21-day period following the final tDCS treatment session in each block. Motor function (open field test) and anxiety (elevated plus maze) were assessed separately in Block I and II, respectively. Aversiveness to mechanical stimulation with the place escape/avoidance paradigm test was assessed in both two blocks following the final repetitive tDCS treatment sessions (11 and 44 days following the SNI). For the study of the descending pathway, mechanical sensitivity was assessed one day before an acute intrathecal injection of naloxone or sterile saline on the fourth day post-tDCS (day 75 post-SNI) in Block III, and on the fifth day, 30 min following intrathecal injection, one mouse in the sham treatment group and two mice in the repetitive PI tDCS group were excluded before Block II and III due to the disconnection of the electrode. For immunohistochemistry experiments, animals received either the sham treatment, single PI tDCS, or repetitive PI tDCS over five days, were killed 1 h later by a high dose of isoflurane and immediately perfused with formalin fixative. The experimenters were blinded to the identity of mice being analyzed in behavioral and immunohistochemistry analyses. Behavioral testing was performed during the light (day) phase.
2.3. Electrode Implantation
Electrodes made of stainless steel with the size M1 × 10 mm were employed over the posterior part of the insular cortex on the right hemisphere (
Figure 1A). Animals were anesthetized with an intraperitoneal injection of medetomidine (0.3 mg/kg; alvetra, Neumünster, Germany), fentanyl (0.01 mg/kg; Janssen-Cilag, Neuss, Germany) and midazolam (4 mg/kg; Hameln Pharma Plus, Hameln, Germany). The head of each mouse was fixed in a stereotaxic alignment system (David Kopf Instruments, Tujunga, CA, USA), and the skull was exposed by standard surgical procedures. The anodal electrode was centered at the anterior-posterior (AP) axis at +0.38 mm relative to Bregma and the mediolateral (ML) axis at +4.00 mm from the midline, and 3.50 mm in depth. The cathodal electrode was centered at AP: −1.34 mm, ML: +4.29 mm, and 4.00 mm in depth. Two holes were superficially made in the skull and the electrodes were mounted into holes separately and cemented onto the skull with three layers of dental cement (Paladur, Heraeus Kulzer, Germany). The electrodes were superficially fixed in the holes in order to avoid contact with the dura of the mouse brain. A mixture of naloxone (0.4 mg/kg; Inresa Arzneimittel, Freiburg, Germany), flumazenil (0.5 mg/kg; Fresenius, Bad Homburg, Germany), and antipamezol (2.5 mg/kg; Prodivet Pharmaceuticals, Belgium;) were injected intraperitoneally to end anaesthesia, and carprofen (5 mg/kg; Norbrook Laboratories, Newry, Northern Ireland) was given to protect against postoperative pain. The animals were placed on a warm heating plate until fully recovered. Coordinates for diverse brain regions in this study were based on the mouse brain atlas by Paxinos and Franklin [
18].
2.4. Spared Nerve Injury (SNI)
After recovery from electrode implantation, animals were anesthetized again with the medetomidine/midazolam/fentanyl mixture (see above). As described previously [
9,
19], the sciatic nerve and its three branches (sural, common peroneal, and tibial) were exposed via an incision of the lateral thigh skin and a dissection of the biceps femoris muscle, and the common peroneal and tibial nerves were tightly ligated and cut distally; a 2–4 mm section was removed from the ligation. The sural nerve remained intact during surgery.
2.5. Transcranial Current Stimulation (tDCS)
All animals received 5 treatment sessions per block (15 min per day over 5 consecutive days). Treatment was initiated at day 3, Day 36 and day 75 post-SNI in Block I, Block II and Block III, respectively. The tDCS protocol was adapted from previous tDCS studies [
9,
11,
20,
21,
22,
23]. Animals were anesthetized with 3% isoflurane, the head fixed via the nosepiece of the stereotaxic mask (RWD Life Science Company, China), and a light sedation maintained with 1% isoflurane. Tungsten wire electrodes attached to the anterior electrode (near to eye) serving as anode (+) and posterior electrode (near to ear) as cathode (−) (
Figure 1A). Constant current at 50 μA was applied for 15 min via an A320 stimulus isolator (World Precision Instruments Inc., Sarasota, FL, USA). Animals in the sham treatment group underwent same procedure but without switching on the stimulator.
2.6. Behavioral Tests
Mice were acclimatized to the von Frey setup for 1 h the day before baseline and pre-tDCS test days as well as at 30 min before each testing session. Following a five consecutive tDCS treatment session, mechanical and cold sensitivity tests were performed 2 h after the final tDCS session, and then at 2 days, 5 days, 9 days, 16 days, 18 days and 21 days post tDCS, respectively, in both blocks. Mice were not acclimatized on the elevated plus maze, the open field arena, or the place escape/avoidance paradigm arena. A locomotion test in the open field was performed at 3 days post treatment in both blocks. Anxiety-like behavior in the elevated plus maze was tested at 3 days post treatment in Block II. The place escape/avoidance paradigm was analyzed at 4 days post treatment in both blocks. To study the effect of PI tDCS on descending pathways, a mechanical sensitivity test was performed before and 30 min after an acute non-invasive intrathecal injection of naloxone (0.4 μg/μL, 5 μL; Inresa Arzneimittel, Freiburg, Germany) or saline injection, which was given under 1% isoflurane anesthesia as previously described [
24].
2.7. Von Frey Filaments (VF)
Mechanical sensitivity of the affected hind paw was tested on an elevated grid (Ugo Basile Inc., Gemonio, Italy) with manually repeated von Frey filaments application with increasing forces (0.04–2.00 g) [
25]. Briefly, von Frey filaments were applied to the lateral plantar surface of the affected hind paw. Withdrawal frequencies were determined from five applications per filament, with a minimal interval of 30 s between applications. Paw lifting was defined as a positive response.
2.8. Cold Plate Test
Cold sensitivity was tested on a circular cold metal surface (5 °C, Hot/Cold Plate 35,100, Ugo Basile Inc., Gemonio, Italy) enclosed by a Perspex cylinder. Latency of the first nociceptive response (paw lifting, shaking, licking, or jumping) was monitored. A 30 s cut-off was used to prevent potential injury to the paws. Cold sensitivity was tested only once per testing session.
2.9. Mobility in an Open Field
Mobility was tested in a custom-made testing arena placed on the floor, with dimensions of 40 (length) × 40 (width) × 38 (height) cm. Mice were allowed to explore the arena freely for 10 min [
26,
27,
28]. The experiment was video-recorded and tracked using ANY-maze software (Stoelting Co., Dublin, Ireland).
2.10. Elevated Plus-Maze (EPM) Test
Anxiety-related behavior was evaluated based on the cumulative exploration time spent by each mouse in the open zones of an EPM apparatus [
29,
30,
31]. The maze consists of four arms, two open arms without walls and two arms enclosed by 15 cm high walls, each of which was 35 cm long, 5 cm wide, and raised 50 cm from the floor. The four arms met at a 5 × 5 cm central intersection. Mice were placed at the junction of the open and covered arms, facing away from an open arm, where the experimenter was positioned, and allowed to move freely for five minutes. Time spent in each zone was recorded and tracked using ANY-maze software (Version 7.1, Stoelting Co., Dublin, Ireland).
2.11. Place Escape/Avoidance Paradigm (PEAP)
In order to assess the aversiveness of evoked mechanical stimulation in neuropathic animals, PEAP was performed four days after the last session of tDCS treatment in both blocks, and was modified from previous studies [
9,
11,
32]. Briefly, animals were given a unilateral hind paw nociceptive stimulation and were placed in a 22 × 22 × 12 cm chamber atop a mesh floor. One half of the chamber is covered with white foil (light area) and the other half of the chamber is covered with black foil (dark area), connected to a 3.5 cm opening in the dividing wall. The behavior of the animal was typically assessed during a 30-min test, with the animal allowed unrestricted movement within the chamber and between the two sides. The first 5 min out of 30 min was defined as an unstimulated reference baseline. At 15 s intervals, a suprathreshold von Frey monofilament (0.07 g was applied in Block I, 0.16 g was applied in Block II) was used to stimulate the lateral plantar surface of a single hind paw. When the animal was located within the dark side of the chamber, the affected paw was stimulated, and the unaffected paw was stimulated while within the light side of the chamber. The entire period of testing was digitally recorded via a USB camera and analyzed by ANY-maze software (Version 7.1, Stoelting Co., Dublin, Ireland).
2.12. Intrathecal Injections
To study the effect of PI tDCS on descending pathways, von Frey baseline mechanical testing was performed 4 days after the last session of tDCS treatment (Block III), but before an acute intrathecal injection of naloxone (0.4 μg/μL, 5 μL; Inresa Arzneimittel, Freiburg, Germany) or saline injection, which was given under 1% isoflurane anesthesia as previously described [
24]. This procedure involved locating the prominent spinous process of L6 with a gentle press and carefully inserting the needle (needle size, 31 G) between the grooves of the L5 and L6 vertebra. A tail flick during needle insertion indicates successful entry of the needle in the intradural space. Animals that did not display the tail flick were not used for the further experiment. Mechanical basal sensitivity was tested 4 days after the last session of the third round of tDCS treatment in Block III (day 75 post-SNI). Intrathecal injection was applied at the fifth day post-tDCS. Thirty minutes after the injection, the von Frey measurement was performed. The animals subsequently received an intrathecal injection of saline (if they had received naloxone previously) or naloxone (if treated with saline before) the next day. The experimenter taking the measurements was always blinded to both the identities of the animals (sham treatment or repetitive PI tDCS) and to the drug (saline or naloxone) that was injected.
2.13. Immunohistochemistry
Non-SNI mice were killed 1 h after either a single tDCS or sham and repetitive session in the first treatment block; SNI mice were killed 4 days after sham or repetitive session in the second treatment block. Animals were perfused transcardially with phosphate-buffer saline (PBS; pH 7.4) followed by 10 % formalin fixative solution (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany). Brains were sectioned coronally at 50 μm were stained as previous described [
11] with primary anti-Fos (Rabbit-anti-Fos, 1:1000, Abcam, ab190289, Cambridge, UK) and secondary antibody (Donkey anti-rabbit Alexa 488, 1:700, Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA). Frozen sections at 25 µm thickness from spinal segments (L3–L5) were processed similarly with the exception that antigen retrieval was performed via incubation in 1 mM EDTA solution prior to the actual staining procedure. Unspecifc antigen blocking was achieved by incubation for 30 min in PBS-T containing 5% (
v/
v) donkey serum (Abcam, ab7475, Cambridge, UK). Rabbit-anti-Fos (1:1000, Abcam, ab190289, Cambridge, UK) was applied for 1 h at room temperature followed by 48 h at 4 °C. Secondary donkey anti-rabbit Alexa 488-conjugated antibody (1:700, Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) diluted in blocking solution was employed, and nuclei were counterstained using Hoechst 33,342 (1:10,000, Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR, USA).
2.14. Image Acquisition and Quantification
Labelled sections were imaged with a Leica TCS SP8 confocal microscope using sequential line scans at a pixel resolution of 1024 × 1024, with the pin hole set to unity. An immersion objective with correction collar (Leica, 20×/0.75, HC PL APO) was used for imaging either Fos-labelled section. A montage of confocal image stacks was acquired over a depth of 20 μm. The maximum z-projection brain images were applied for manual analysis by Fuji-Image J software (version 1.50b, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA), using a thresholding approach (threshold > 30, pixel
˄2 size > 6, circularity 0.23–1.0) on 8-bit format images and data from the stereotaxic atlas [
18] was used to define region of interest outlines anatomically according to corresponding reference sections. After manually counting, the results were further screened manually to exclude false positives.
2.15. Statistical Analyses
A normal distribution of the data was verified in Prism (Version 8.0, Graphpad Software Inc., San Diego, CA, USA) using the D’Agostino-Pearson Omnibus K2 normality test, and all data is expressed as mean ± standard error of the mean (S.E.M). A statistical significance of difference was determined using a one-way ANOVA test, two-way ANOVA with post hoc Sidak’s test, Tukey’s tests enabling multiple comparisons, or a Mann-Whitney test using Prism. A p-value of < 0.05 was considered significant in all tests.
4. Discussion
Non-invasive brain stimulation is increasingly gaining value as a therapy for chronic pain that is refractory to drug treatments [
8]. While there is consensus that this new line of therapy should be increasingly tested and developed for routine clinical practice, there are major hurdles that need to be overcome, such as the high degree of variability in efficacy across clinical cohorts and types of chronic pain, the tradeoff between efficacy and safety, the need for optimization and standardization of treatment types and regimens, and the lack of mechanistic insights, amongst others [
4,
5]. Addressing these in the human context is challenging, costly and, not least, limited in the ability to perform invasive interventions and study mechanisms [
37]. Several studies have demonstrated the utility of animal models in compensating for these limitations, but were so far limited to neurostimulation of the motor cortex and prefrontal cortex [
9,
10,
11]. The value of this study is: (i) it is the first study, to our knowledge, testing direct neurostimulation of the insular cortex; (ii) the study tests a new approach for limiting the spread of activity to other cerebral cortical domains; (iii) the study addresses the changes in insular activity that are associated with pain relief; (iv) the study addresses mechanisms and circuitry downstream of the insula in modulating pain; and, finally, (v) the study uncovers the tremendous therapeutic potential of targeting the insular cortex in neurostimulation approaches in reversing some of the debilitating symptoms of chronically established neuropathic pain.
Until we performed the experiments and evaluated the data, how tDCS of the insula would affect neuropathic pain was completely open, and potential scenarios reflecting both the exacerbation of pain or the inhibition of pain were equally possible. This is because previous reports on insula activation via ictal discharges suggest that it can evoke pain [
12], and findings in animal models also support a pro-nociceptive role for the insula [
38]. The synaptic potentiation in the insula has been reported following nerve injury [
17]. Therefore, activation of the insula would be expected to excarbate neuropathic pain-like behaviors. On the other hand, however, tDCS-induced activation of other brain regions that are typically activated during pain and are linked to nociceptive sensitization, such as the prelimbic and cingulate cortices, can paradoxically lead to analgesic effects [
2]. Here, we observed a profound suppression of sensory hypersensitivity in nerve-injured mice upon PI tDCS, and given that we have previously performed tDCS on the prefrontal cortex and motor cortex, we noted that the magnitude of antinociceptive effects was comparatively stronger with PI tDCS. The antinociceptive effects of PI tDCS were not attributable to changes in motor function since we observed changes in paw withdrawal selectively to some modalities of nociception, and locomotion was not affected.
Neurostimulation does not necessarily involve the activation of neurons; rather, the change in activity is determined by anodal or cathodal modes of stimulation and the stimulation parameters in terms of intensity, frequency, and rhythm, amongst others [
6]. Anodal stimulation has been linked to the activation and cathodal to the inhibition of neuronal activity, and the design of tDCS in previous studies involved the flow of current across large parts of the cerebral cortex [
6]. While this may have contributed to the analgesia seen with cortical neurostimulation, activating large parts of the brain is undesired given the massive functional diversity and significance of the cortex in brain functions. Here, in an attempt to restrict neurostimulation to the insula, we positioned both electrodes in the PI relative to each other along the anterior-posterior axis. Although we cannot control for the path of the current flow, the Fos activation pattern demonstrates that the current flow between the electrodes led to a reasonably selective manipulation of the PI area located between the two electrode poles. This setup is not dissimilar to bipolar stimulation configurations employed in acute brain slice recordings or in vivo bipolar microstimulation, and our analyses now demonstrate that this could be useful for delineating the impact of individual cerebral cortical domains, which is important given that domains located in close proximity can demonstrate highly divergent functions.
Using this setup, we observed that single sessions of tDCS actually led to an acute inhibition of the PI, which is different from the previous studies on anodal stimulation of the motor cortex [
9] and the prefrontal cortex [
11]. Similar to those previous studies, our analyses also revealed that repeating tDCS sessions over five days, which evoked profound antinociceptive effects, led to a normalization of activity in the PI. Importantly, however, under neuropathic conditions, repetitive PI tDCS strongly suppressed indicators of activity in the PI, thus revealing that adaptive mechanisms come into play. Such adaptive mechanisms may span diverse mechanistic levels, including synaptic changes in both structure and function, changes in excitation-inhibition balance alterations in cortical columns of the PI via cellular changes in excitatory and inhibitory neuronal cell types, plasticity of connectivity and oscillatory rhythmic activity, amongst others. Uncovering their nature in future studies will be of critical value.
Our analyses here provided two insights into changes in connectivity and activity downstream of the PI that are elicited by repetitive tDCS. Firstly, we observed that descending inhibitory systems which lead to spinal antinociception by evoking the local release of endogenous opioids in the spinal cord are necessarily involved since the antiallodynic effect of repetitive PI tDCS was blocked by the spinal application of the opioid antagonist naloxone. Bulbospinal pathways modulating spinal nociception can be both facilitatory and inhibitory in nature, and neuropathic hypersensitivity has been linked to a dominance of descending facilitation [
34,
35]. Our previous work has demonstrated that the functional connectivity between the PI and the RVM can recruit descending serotonergic facilitatory pathways [
38]. Here, although repetitive PI tDCS did not alter activity of the RVM in uninjured mice, it strongly suppressed activity in the RVM of neuropathic mice. In line with this observation, the activation of the superficial spinal laminae was also suppressed by repetitive PI tDCS. These observations, coupled with the finding that the activity of the vlPAG and the lPAG was enhanced, suggests that repetitive PI tDCS restores the balance between descending inhibition and descending facilitation that is disturbed in neuropathic conditions, and thus overcomes the deficits in spinal inhibition in neuropathic pain. Furthermore, the observation that the application of repetitive PI tDCS enhances activity in the M1 cortex in neuropathic mice, but not in uninjured mice, implicates the recruitment of the M1, the stimulation of which by TMS or tDCS is known to relieve neuropathic pain [
8,
9,
10]. Future studies functionally dissecting the interplay between diverse cerebral cortical domains in modulation of pain will provide valuable insights into exploiting these aspects of network plasticity towards long-term pain relief.
One noteworthy feature of the phenotypic consequences of repetitive PI tDCS is that we observed a robust effect on the sensory-discriminative component of neuropathic pain, but not on pain-related aversion and negative affect. This may reflect and indeed contribute functional experimental evidence for a functional dichotomy proposed by human brain imaging studies on nociceptive features of pain being encoded in the PI and affective dimensions of pain in the AI [
14]. This is supported by connectivity analyses showing that the PI mainly receives nociceptive and thermoceptive information from the somatosensory thalamic nuclei [
39]. In contrast, the anterior insula is implicated in the regulation of physiological changes associated with emotional states, which is consistent with its connectivity with multiple limbic sites involved in the affective aspects of pain, including the prefrontal cortex, pregenual cingulate cortex, the medial thalamic nucleus, and the amygdala [
39] The posterior insula has been predicted to be a detector of the intensity of pain since its activation was found to be proportional to the intensity of a noxious stimulus independent of its quality in human experiments [
13]. Taken together with this literature, our findings would predict that extending our PI tDCS setup to include the AI may enable targeting the emotional-affective dimension of pain by inhibiting the AI in addition to inhibiting allodynia via the PI.
Finally, the remarkably long duration of suppression of neuropathic allodynia upon PI tDCS and the reinstatement of this clinically relevant analgesic effect via multiple repetitions of the treatment cycle at chronic stages of neuropathic pain indicate an excellent basis for therapeutically developing neurostimulation focused on the insula. This study demonstrates that rodent models of human pain disorders can support developing novel neuromodulation techniques via a mechanism-based approach and will provide impetus for working out safe and effective parameters for clinical trials in humans.