Breakthrough Discovery at IISc Bengaluru: Unraveling the Brain's Itch-Suppression Circuit Under Stress
Researchers at the prestigious Indian Institute of Science (IISc) in Bengaluru have made a groundbreaking discovery in neuroscience, revealing how acute stress can temporarily suppress the sensation of itch through a specific neural circuit in the brain. Published on February 20, 2026, in the renowned journal Cell Reports, the study titled "Lateral hypothalamus directs stress-induced modulation of acute and psoriatic itch" sheds light on the intricate interplay between emotional states and sensory perceptions.
This research not only advances our understanding of somatosensory processing but also highlights IISc's pivotal role in global neuroscience contributions from Indian higher education institutions. The findings demonstrate that during acute stress, neurons in the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA)—a brain region associated with stress responses, motivation, and emotion—activate to inhibit itch signals, effectively prioritizing survival instincts over minor irritations.
The Science Behind Itch and Stress: A Long-Overlooked Interaction
Itch, or pruritus, and pain are both protective sensations elicited by potentially harmful stimuli, yet they provoke distinct behaviors—withdrawal for pain and scratching for itch. While the neural pathways for pain have been extensively mapped, the modulation of itch by psychological states like stress has remained enigmatic. Prior observations suggested acute stress diminishes itch intensity, proportional to stress severity, as seen in human studies with cowhage-evoked pruritus. Conversely, chronic stress aggravates conditions such as atopic dermatitis or psoriasis.
In India, where psoriasis affects an estimated 3.59 million people with prevalence rates of 0.44% to 2.8%, itch is reported in up to 86% of patients, severely impacting quality of life.
The LHA, embedded deep in the hypothalamus, integrates stress signals and projects to brainstem areas like the periaqueductal gray (PAG), rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM), and lateral parabrachial nucleus (LPBN)—known regulators of pruritus transmission from the spinal cord to higher brain centers.
Meet the Minds Behind the Study: IISc's Neuroscience Pioneers
Arnab Barik, whose lab at CNS investigates the neurobiology of pain and itch using genetic, behavioral, and circuit-level tools in mice, spearheaded this effort. His previous works include circuits for pain-itch gating and stress analgesia, establishing him as a key figure in somatosensory neuroscience.
This publication exemplifies IISc's prowess, bolstered by philanthropy like the Pratiksha Trust's Rs. 225 crore endowment for the Centre for Brain Research (CBR), fostering interdisciplinary neuroscience.
Innovative Methods: Precision Neuroscience Tools at IISc
The team utilized TRAP2 (Targeted Recombination in Active Populations) transgenic mice, where tamoxifen-inducible Cre recombinase under the cFos promoter labels stress-activated neurons post-restraint stress. AAV-DIO vectors delivered chemogenetic actuators: hM3Dq for excitation (via deschloroclozapine, DCZ) and Kir2.1 for silencing; optogenetics with eNpHR3.0 for inhibition.
Behavioral assays quantified scratching bouts in chloroquine-induced acute itch and imiquimod-model psoriatic chronic itch. Fiber photometry tracked calcium dynamics with GCaMP8s, while ex vivo patch-clamp assessed excitability. Viral tracing (rabies for inputs, AAV for outputs) mapped circuits. These sophisticated techniques, honed at IISc's state-of-the-art facilities, ensure robust, reproducible results.
- TRAP labeling: Captures transient stress-neuron ensembles.
- Chemogenetics: Bidirectional manipulation without optical fibers.
- Projection-specific opsins: Pinpoints PAG/RVM roles.
Such methodologies position IISc as a leader, attracting global talent—explore scholarships for neuroscience pursuits.
Key Findings: Acute Stress Silences Itch via LHA Neurons
Acute restraint stress reduced chloroquine-evoked scratching by significant margins (p=0.0092) and psoriatic itch (p=0.0004). Activating LHAstress-TRAP neurons mimicked this suppression (p=0.0074 acute, p=0.0042 chronic), inducing anxiety-like behaviors in open-field and light-dark box tests, plus place aversion—hallmarks of stress circuits.
Inhibition potentiated itch (p=0.0001 chloroquine), blocking stress relief, proving necessity. These mostly glutamatergic (VGlut2+) neurons project densely to PAG (primary effector), RVM, and LPBN. PAG-terminal stimulation sufficed for suppression; optogenetic silencing there exacerbated itch (p=0.0009).
LHA→PAG likely engages descending GABAergic inhibition on spinal itch neurons, echoing stress-analgesia pathways.
Chronic Itch Twist: Sensitization in Psoriasis Models
In imiquimod-induced psoriasis mice, LHAstress-TRAP neurons displayed hyper-excitability: steeper F/I curves, hyperpolarized rheobase, shorter action potential latency. Fiber photometry showed correlation with spontaneous (p=0.0318) and evoked scratching (p=0.0165), absent in acute itch—suggesting chronic inflammation primes these neurons via HPA dysregulation or somatosensory feedback.
This explains stress-exacerbated pruritus in psoriasis, where patients report flares during anxiety. In India, with psoriasis itch burdening millions, this informs holistic management integrating stress reduction.
Therapeutic Horizons: From Bench to Bedside for Chronic Pruritus
Barik emphasizes: "Most current treatments are peripheral... Understanding these circuits gives us a framework for therapies addressing central mechanisms."
India's pruritus therapeutics market, projected to grow from USD 9.6B (2025) to 18.4B (2032) at 9.8% CAGR, underscores demand.
IISc's Neuroscience Ecosystem: Funding and Achievements Fueling Innovation
IISc's CNS and CBR, backed by Pratiksha Trust (Rs. 225Cr+), drive brain research amid India's R&D push (GERD 0.64% GDP). 2026 saw EMSTAR fellowships for women in aging brain studies and BCD Neural Implants Moonshot (Rs. multi-crore).
Recent feats: IIT-IISc quantum ties, AI neurosci tools. For careers, India higher ed jobs at IISc offer avenues in faculty roles.
Implications for Indian Higher Education and Research Careers
This Cell Reports paper boosts IISc's NIRF ranking, NIRF penalizing retractions. It attracts PhDs/postdocs amid PhD dropout concerns. India's AI mission (38k GPUs) complements neuroscience via IndiaAI portals.
- Training: IISc's neuroscience PhDs gain circuit-mapping expertise.
- Funding: DBT-Wellcome, ICMR support itch/pain grants.
- Careers: Transition to biotech/pharma; see postdoc advice.
Future Directions: Expanding the Stress-Itch Frontier
Next: Molecular profiling (orexin?), multi-stress types, human fMRI validation. Longitudinal chronic models, comorbidities. Global ties like Penn State scholarships enhance.
X buzz from @NCBS_Bangalore highlights community interest.
Photo by Markus Kammermann on Unsplash
Why This Matters for Researchers, Patients, and Academia
IISc's feat bridges emotion-sensation, promising itch relief for psoriasis sufferers. It cements India's research stature, urging GERD hikes. Explore Rate My Professor, higher ed jobs, career advice, university jobs, or post a job to join this ecosystem.