Journal club 2013-04-30

2383.full
Filename : 2383-full.pdf (969 KB)
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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013 Feb 5;110(6):2383-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1215555110. Epub 2013 Jan 23.

UV light phototransduction activates transient receptor potential A1 ion channels in human melanocytes.

Source

Department of Molecular Pharmacology, Physiology, and Biotechnology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA.

Abstract

Human skin is constantly exposed to solar ultraviolet radiation (UVR), the most prevalent environmental carcinogen. Humans have the unique ability among mammals to respond to UVR by increasing their skin pigmentation, a protective process driven by melanin synthesis in epidermalmelanocytes. The molecular mechanisms used by melanocytes to detect and respond to long-wavelength UVR (UVA) are not well understood. We recently identified a UVA phototransduction pathway in melanocytes that is mediated by G protein-coupled receptors and leads to rapid calcium mobilization. Here we report that in human epidermal melanocytes physiological doses of UVR activate a retinal-dependent current mediated bytransient receptor potential A1 (TRPA1) ion channels. The TRPA1 photocurrent is UVA-specific and requires G protein and phospholipase C signaling, thus contributing to UVA-induced calcium responses to mediate downstream cellular effects and providing evidence for TRPA1 function in mammalianphototransduction. Remarkably, TRPA1 activation is required for the UVR-induced and retinal-dependent early increase in cellular melanin. Our results show that TRPA1 is essential for a unique extraocular phototransduction pathway in human melanocytes that is activated by physiological doses of UVR and results in early melanin synthesis.

Journal club 2013-04-26

J. Biol. Chem.-2013-Than-jbc.M113.450072
Filename : j-biol-chem-2013-than-jbc-m113-450072.pdf (1 MB)
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J Biol Chem. 2013 Mar 18. [Epub ahead of print]

The excitation and modulation of TRPV1-, TRPA1-and TRPM8-expressing sensory neurons by the pruritogen chloroquine.

Abstract

The sensations of pain, itch and cold often interact with each other. Pain inhibits itch, whereas cold inhibits both pain and itch. TRPV1 and TRPA1 channels transduce pain and itch, whereas TRPM8 transduces cold. The pruritogen chloroquine (CQ) was reported to excite TRPA1, leading to the sensation of itch. It is unclear how CQ excites and modulates TRPA1+, TRPV1+ and TRPM8+ neurons and thus affects the sensations of pain, itchand cold. Here, we show that only 43% of CQ-excited dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons express TRPA1; as expected, the responses of these neurons were completely prevented by the TRPA1 antagonist HC-030031. The remaining 57% of CQ-excited neurons did not express TRPA1, and excitation was not prevented by either a TRPA1 or a TRPV1 antagonist, but was prevented by the general TRPC channel blocker BTP2 and the selective TRPC3 inhibitor Pyr3. Furthermore, CQ caused potent sensitization of TRPV1 in 51.9% of TRPV1+ neurons, and concomitant inhibition of TRPM8 in 48.8% of TRPM8+ DRG neurons. Sensitization of TRPV1 is mainly caused by activation of the PLC-PKC pathway following activation of the CQ receptor MrgprA3. By contrast, inhibition of TRPM8 is caused by a direct action of activated Galpha q independently of the PLC pathway. Our data suggest the involvement of TRPC3 channel acting together with TRPA1 to mediate CQ-induced itch. CQ not only elicits itch by directly excitingitch-encoding neurons, but also exerts previously unappreciated widespread actions on pain-, itch- and cold-sensing neurons, leading to enhanced pain and itch.

Journal club 2013-04-12

13525-1.fullTRPA1 mediates formalin-induced pain

*Hydra Biosciences, Inc., 790 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, MA 02139; and
Departments of Physiology and Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143
To whom correspondence may be addressed. E-mail: julius@cmp.ucsf.edu or ; Email: mmoran@hydrabiosciences.com

Contributed by David Julius, July 5, 2007

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Author contributions: C.R.M. and J.M.-B. contributed equally to this work; C.R.M., J.M.-B., D.M.B., J.S., N.J.H., D.J., M.M.M., and C.M.F. designed research; C.R.M., J.M.-B., D.M.B., J.S., K.L.D., and M.Z. performed research; C.R.M., J.M.-B., D.M.B., J.S., M.Z., J.A.C., D.J., M.M.M., and C.M.F. analyzed data; and C.R.M., D.M.B., J.S., J.A.C., D.J., M.M.M., and C.M.F. wrote the paper.

Received June 18, 2007
Copyright © 2007 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA

Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.

This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.
 

Abstract

The formalin model is widely used for evaluating the effects of analgesic compounds in laboratory animals. Injection of formalin into the hind paw induces a biphasic pain response; the first phase is thought to result from direct activation of primary afferent sensory neurons, whereas the second phase has been proposed to reflect the combined effects of afferent input and central sensitization in the dorsal horn. Here we show that formalin excites sensory neurons by directly activating TRPA1, a cation channel that plays an important role in inflammatory pain. Formalin induced robust calcium influx in cells expressing cloned or native TRPA1 channels, and these responses were attenuated by a previously undescribed TRPA1-selective antagonist. Moreover, sensory neurons from TRPA1-deficient mice lacked formalin sensitivity. At the behavioral level, pharmacologic blockade or genetic ablation of TRPA1 produced marked attenuation of the characteristic flinching, licking, and lifting responses resulting from intraplantar injection of formalin. Our results show that TRPA1 is the principal site of formalin’s pain-producing action in vivo, and that activation of this excitatory channel underlies the physiological and behavioral responses associated with this model of pain hypersensitivity.

Keywords: analgesia, inflammation, trp channel, formaldehyde

Journal club 2013-04-05

Peptidergic CGRPa Primary Sensory Neurons Encode Heat and Itch
and Tonically Suppress Sensitivity to Cold

Eric S. McCoy,1 Bonnie Taylor-Blake,1 Sarah E. Street,1 Alaine L. Pribisko,1 Jihong Zheng,1 and Mark J. Zylka1,* 1Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, UNC Neuroscience Center, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CB #7545, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA
*Correspondence: zylka@med.unc.edu

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2013.01.030

mmc11-s2.0-S0896627313000962-main

SUMMARY

Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is a classic molecular marker of peptidergic primary somatosen- sory neurons. Despite years of research, it is unknown whether these neurons are required to sense pain or other sensory stimuli. Here, we found that genetic ablation of CGRPa-expressing sensory neurons reduced sensitivity to noxious heat, capsa- icin, and itch (histamine and chloroquine) and impaired thermoregulation but did not impair mecha- nosensation or b-alanine itch—stimuli associated with nonpeptidergic sensory neurons. Unexpectedly, ablation enhanced behavioral responses to cold stimuli and cold mimetics without altering peripheral nerve responses to cooling. Mechanistically, ablation reduced tonic and evoked activity in postsynaptic spinal neurons associated with TRPV1/heat, while profoundly increasing tonic and evoked activity in spinal neurons associated with TRPM8/cold. Our data reveal that CGRPa sensory neurons encode heat and itch and tonically cross-inhibit cold-respon- sive spinal neurons. Disruption of this crosstalk unmasks cold hypersensitivity, with mechanistic implications for neuropathic pain and temperature perception.

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