BMI SEMINAR // Gregory Scherrer - The neural basis of pain experience and its modulation by opioids

Thumbnail

Event details

Date 24.11.2021
Hour 12:1513:15
Speaker Gregory Scherrer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA
Location Online
Category Conferences - Seminars
Event Language English
IMPORTANT NOTICE // In-person attendance of this seminar is subjected to some constraints:
  • Maximum number of participants is limited to 80
  • Valid COVID certificate and ID (e.g. Camipro card), required to enter the conference room, will be checked at the entrance
  • Face masks are mandatory for everyone in the seminar room (excepted the speaker while presenting).
How the brain creates a painful experience remains a mystery. Solving this mystery is crucial to understanding the fundamental biological processes that underlie the perception of body integrity, and to creating better, non-addictive pain treatments. My laboratory’s goal is to resolve the neural basis of pain. We aim to understand the mechanisms by which our nervous system produces and assembles the sensory-discriminative, affective-motivational, and cognitive-evaluative dimensions of pain to create this unique and critically important experience. To capture every component of the pain experience, we examine the entirety of the pain circuitry, from sensory and spinal ascending pathways to cortical/subcortical circuits and brainstem descending pain modulation systems, at the molecular, cellular, circuit and whole-animal levels. For these studies, we have invented novel behavioral paradigms to interrogate the affective and cognitive dimensions of pain in mice while simultaneously imaging and manipulating nociceptive circuits. My laboratory also investigates how opioids suppress pain. Remarkably, despite their medical and societal significance, how opium poppy alkaloids such as morphine produce profound analgesia remains largely unexplained. By identifying where and how opioids act in neural circuits, we not only establish the mechanisms of action of one of the oldest drugs known to humans, but also reveal the critical elements of the pain circuitry for developing of novel analgesics and bringing an end to the opioid epidemic

Practical information

  • Informed public
  • Free

Organizer

  • SV BMI Host : R. Schneggenburger

Share