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Dive into the research topics where Susana G. Sotocinal is active.

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Featured researches published by Susana G. Sotocinal.


Science | 2006

Social Modulation of Pain as Evidence for Empathy in Mice

Dale J. Langford; Sara E. Crager; Zarrar Shehzad; Shad B. Smith; Susana G. Sotocinal; Jeremy S. Levenstadt; Mona Lisa Chanda; Daniel J. Levitin; Jeffrey S. Mogil

Empathy is thought to be unique to higher primates, possibly to humans alone. We report the modulation of pain sensitivity in mice produced solely by exposure to their cagemates, but not to strangers, in pain. Mice tested in dyads and given an identical noxious stimulus displayed increased pain behaviors with statistically greater co-occurrence, effects dependent on visual observation. When familiar mice were given noxious stimuli of different intensities, their pain behavior was influenced by their neighbors status bidirectionally. Finally, observation of a cagemate in pain altered pain sensitivity of an entirely different modality, suggesting that nociceptive mechanisms in general are sensitized.


Nature Methods | 2010

Coding of facial expressions of pain in the laboratory mouse

Dale J. Langford; Andrea L. Bailey; Mona Lisa Chanda; Sarah E Clarke; Tanya E Drummond; Stephanie Echols; Sarah Glick; Joelle Ingrao; Tammy Klassen-Ross; Michael L. LaCroix-Fralish; Lynn Matsumiya; Susana G. Sotocinal; John Tabaka; David H. W. Wong; Arn M. J. M. van den Maagdenberg; Michel D. Ferrari; Kenneth D. Craig; Jeffrey S. Mogil

Facial expression is widely used as a measure of pain in infants; whether nonhuman animals display such pain expressions has never been systematically assessed. We developed the mouse grimace scale (MGS), a standardized behavioral coding system with high accuracy and reliability; assays involving noxious stimuli of moderate duration are accompanied by facial expressions of pain. This measure of spontaneously emitted pain may provide insight into the subjective pain experience of mice.


Nature Methods | 2014

Olfactory exposure to males, including men, causes stress and related analgesia in rodents

Loren J. Martin; Kelsey Isbester; Susana G. Sotocinal; S. Rosen; Alexander H. Tuttle; Jeffrey S. Wieskopf; Erinn L Acland; Anastassia Dokova; Basil Kadoura; Philip Leger; Josiane C.S. Mapplebeck; Martina McPhail; Ada Delaney; Gustaf Wigerblad; Alan P. Schumann; T. Quinn; Johannes Frasnelli; Camilla I. Svensson; Wendy F. Sternberg; Jeffrey S. Mogil

We found that exposure of mice and rats to male but not female experimenters produces pain inhibition. Male-related stimuli induced a robust physiological stress response that results in stress-induced analgesia. This effect could be replicated with T-shirts worn by men, bedding material from gonadally intact and unfamiliar male mammals, and presentation of compounds secreted from the human axilla. Experimenter sex can thus affect apparent baseline responses in behavioral testing.


Nature Neuroscience | 2015

Different immune cells mediate mechanical pain hypersensitivity in male and female mice

Josiane C.S. Mapplebeck; S. Rosen; Simon Beggs; Sarah Taves; Jessica K. Alexander; Loren J. Martin; Jean-Sebastien Austin; Susana G. Sotocinal; Di Chen; Mu Yang; Xiang Qun Shi; Hao Huang; Nicolas J. Pillon; Philip J. Bilan; Yu Shan Tu; Amira Klip; Ru-Rong Ji; Ji Zhang; Michael W. Salter; Jeffrey S. Mogil

A large and rapidly increasing body of evidence indicates that microglia-to-neuron signaling is essential for chronic pain hypersensitivity. Using multiple approaches, we found that microglia are not required for mechanical pain hypersensitivity in female mice; female mice achieved similar levels of pain hypersensitivity using adaptive immune cells, likely T lymphocytes. This sexual dimorphism suggests that male mice cannot be used as proxies for females in pain research.


Molecular Pain | 2011

The Rat Grimace Scale: A partially automated method for quantifying pain in the laboratory rat via facial expressions

Susana G. Sotocinal; Austin Zaloum; Alexander H. Tuttle; Loren J. Martin; Jeffrey S. Wieskopf; Josiane C.S. Mapplebeck; Peng Wei; Shu Zhan; Shuren Zhang; Jason J. McDougall; Oliver D. King; Jeffrey S. Mogil

We recently demonstrated the utility of quantifying spontaneous pain in mice via the blinded coding of facial expressions. As the majority of preclinical pain research is in fact performed in the laboratory rat, we attempted to modify the scale for use in this species. We present herein the Rat Grimace Scale, and show its reliability, accuracy, and ability to quantify the time course of spontaneous pain in the intraplantar complete Freunds adjuvant, intraarticular kaolin-carrageenan, and laparotomy (post-operative pain) assays. The scales ability to demonstrate the dose-dependent analgesic efficacy of morphine is also shown. In addition, we have developed software, Rodent Face Finder®, which successfully automates the most labor-intensive step in the process. Given the known mechanistic dissociations between spontaneous and evoked pain, and the primacy of the former as a clinical problem, we believe that widespread adoption of spontaneous pain measures such as the Rat Grimace Scale might lead to more successful translation of basic science findings into clinical application.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Spinal Cord Toll-Like Receptor 4 Mediates Inflammatory and Neuropathic Hypersensitivity in Male But Not Female Mice

Michael L. LaCroix-Fralish; Alexander H. Tuttle; Susana G. Sotocinal; Jean-Sebastien Austin; Jennifer Ritchie; Mona Lisa Chanda; Allyson C. Graham; Lucas Topham; Simon Beggs; Michael W. Salter; Jeffrey S. Mogil

The innate immune system is increasingly appreciated to play an important role in the mediation of chronic pain, and one molecule implicated in this process is the Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4). Here, using pharmacological and genetic manipulations, we found that activating TLR4 in the spinal cord, with the agonist lipopolysaccharide (LPS), causes robust mechanical allodynia but only in male mice. Spinal LPS had no pain-producing effect in female mice. TLR4 also has a sex-specific role in inflammatory (complete Freunds adjuvant) and neuropathic (spared nerve injury) pain: pain behaviors were TLR4 dependent in males but TLR4 independent in females. The sex differences appear to be specific to the spinal cord, as LPS administered to the brain or the hindpaw produces equivalent allodynia in both sexes, and specific to pain, as intrathecal LPS produces equivalent hypothermia in both sexes. The involvement of TLR4 in pain behaviors in male mice is dependent on testosterone, as shown by gonadectomy and hormone replacement. We found no sex differences in spinal Tlr4 gene expression at baseline or after LPS, suggesting the existence of parallel spinal pain-processing circuitry in female mice not involving TLR4.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Oxytocin-induced analgesia and scratching are mediated by the vasopressin-1A receptor in the mouse

Ara Schorscher-Petcu; Susana G. Sotocinal; Sorana Ciura; Anouk Dupré; Jennifer Ritchie; Jacqueline N. Crawley; Shuang Bao Hu; Katsuhiko Nishimori; Larry J. Young; Eliane Tribollet; Rémi Quirion; Jeffrey S. Mogil

The neuropeptides oxytocin (OXT) and arginine vasopressin (AVP) contribute to the regulation of diverse cognitive and physiological functions including nociception. Indeed, OXT has been reported to be analgesic when administered directly into the brain, the spinal cord, or systemically. Here, we characterized the phenotype of oxytocin receptor (OTR) and vasopressin-1A receptor (V1AR) null mutant mice in a battery of pain assays. Surprisingly, OTR knock-out mice displayed a pain phenotype identical to their wild-type littermates. Moreover, systemic administration of OXT dose-dependently produced analgesia in both wild-type and OTR knock-out mice in three different assays, the radiant-heat paw withdrawal test, the von Frey test of mechanical sensitivity, and the formalin test of inflammatory nociception. In contrast, OXT-induced analgesia was completely absent in V1AR knock-out mice. In wild-type mice, OXT-induced analgesia could be fully prevented by pretreatment with a V1AR but not an OTR antagonist. Receptor binding studies demonstrated that the distribution of OXT and AVP binding sites in mouse lumbar spinal cord resembles the pattern observed in rat. AVP binding sites diffusely label the lumbar spinal cord, whereas OXT binding sites cluster in the substantia gelatinosa of the dorsal horn. In contrast, quantitative real-time reverse transcription (RT)-PCR revealed that V1AR but not OTR mRNA is abundantly expressed in mouse dorsal root ganglia, where it localizes to small- and medium-diameter cells as shown by single-cell RT-PCR. Hence, V1ARs expressed in dorsal root ganglia might represent a previously unrecognized target for the analgesic action of OXT and AVP.


PLOS ONE | 2012

The Assessment of Post-Vasectomy Pain in Mice Using Behaviour and the Mouse Grimace Scale

Matthew C. Leach; Kristel Klaus; Amy L. Miller; Maud Scotto di Perrotolo; Susana G. Sotocinal; Paul Flecknell

Background Current behaviour-based pain assessments for laboratory rodents have significant limitations. Assessment of facial expression changes, as a novel means of pain scoring, may overcome some of these limitations. The Mouse Grimace Scale appears to offer a means of assessing post-operative pain in mice that is as effective as manual behavioural-based scoring, without the limitations of such schemes. Effective assessment of post-operative pain is not only critical for animal welfare, but also the validity of science using animal models. Methodology/Principal Findings This study compared changes in behaviour assessed using both an automated system (“HomeCageScan”) and using manual analysis with changes in facial expressions assessed using the Mouse Grimace Scale (MGS). Mice (n = 6/group) were assessed before and after surgery (scrotal approach vasectomy) and either received saline, meloxicam or bupivacaine. Both the MGS and manual scoring of pain behaviours identified clear differences between the pre and post surgery periods and between those animals receiving analgesia (20 mg/kg meloxicam or 5 mg/kg bupivacaine) or saline post-operatively. Both of these assessments were highly correlated with those showing high MGS scores also exhibiting high frequencies of pain behaviours. Automated behavioural analysis in contrast was only able to detect differences between the pre and post surgery periods. Conclusions In conclusion, both the Mouse Grimace Scale and manual scoring of pain behaviours are assessing the presence of post-surgical pain, whereas automated behavioural analysis could be detecting surgical stress and/or post-surgical pain. This study suggests that the Mouse Grimace Scale could prove to be a quick and easy means of assessing post-surgical pain, and the efficacy of analgesic treatment in mice that overcomes some of the limitations of behaviour-based assessment schemes.


Nature Neuroscience | 2011

Pain sensitivity and vasopressin analgesia are mediated by a gene-sex-environment interaction

Jeffrey S. Mogil; Michael L. LaCroix-Fralish; Shad B. Smith; Anny Fortin; Susana G. Sotocinal; Jennifer Ritchie; Jean Sebastien Austin; Ara Schorscher-Petcu; Kara Melmed; Jan T. Czerminski; Rosalie A. Bittong; J. Brad Mokris; John K. Neubert; C. Campbell; Robert R. Edwards; James N. Campbell; Jacqueline N. Crawley; William R. Lariviere; Margaret R. Wallace; Wendy F. Sternberg; Carey D. Balaban; Inna Belfer; Roger B. Fillingim

Quantitative trait locus mapping of chemical/inflammatory pain in the mouse identified the Avpr1a gene, which encodes the vasopressin-1A receptor (V1AR), as being responsible for strain-dependent pain sensitivity to formalin and capsaicin. A genetic association study in humans revealed the influence of a single nucleotide polymorphism (rs10877969) in AVPR1A on capsaicin pain levels, but only in male subjects reporting stress at the time of testing. The analgesic efficacy of the vasopressin analog desmopressin revealed a similar interaction between the drug and acute stress, as desmopressin inhibition of capsaicin pain was only observed in nonstressed subjects. Additional experiments in mice confirmed the male-specific interaction of V1AR and stress, leading to the conclusion that vasopressin activates endogenous analgesia mechanisms unless they have already been activated by stress. These findings represent, to the best of our knowledge, the first explicit demonstration of analgesic efficacy depending on the emotional state of the recipient, and illustrate the heuristic power of a bench-to-bedside-to-bench translational strategy.


Pain | 2006

Screening for pain phenotypes: Analysis of three congenic mouse strains on a battery of nine nociceptive assays

Jeffrey S. Mogil; Jennifer Ritchie; Susana G. Sotocinal; Shad B. Smith; Sylvie Croteau; Daniel J. Levitin; Anna K. Naumova

&NA; In an attempt to identify new genes responsible for variability in pain sensitivity, we tested three congenic mouse strains – in which a small portion of the genome of the MOLF/Ei strain has been placed on a C57BL/6 genetic background – on a battery of nine nociceptive assays, chosen to reflect those assays in most common use in the pain literature. Mice of both sexes were evaluated by two different testers at different points in time, allowing us to examine the relative importance of genotype, sex, tester and cohort effects on data from these assays. We find strong evidence for the existence of two quantitative trait loci (i.e., genomic regions containing variability‐causing genes), one for thermal nociception on mouse chromosome (Chr) 17 (Chr 17; Tpnr3) and one for formalin test nociception on mouse Chr 12 (Nociq3). We note, however, that the nociceptive assays in this battery feature strong main effects and interactions of sex, tester, and cohort, which if not controlled or covaried can seriously confound interpretation of genetic experiments, including the comparison of transgenic knockout mice to their wild‐type controls.

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Shad B. Smith

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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