Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.13 (protein kinase C)
49,245 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 or TRPV1 is a calcium-permeable ion channel that is activated by capsaicin, the active component of hot chilli peppers, and is involved in the development of inflammatory and neuropathic hyperalgesias. Ethanol can sensitise TRPV1-mediated responses, but the pathways contributing to the potentiation of TRPV1 by ethanol have not been clearly defined. Since the mu opioid receptor (MOP) agonist morphine can inhibit TRPV1 responses potentiated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA), and ethanol-mediated modulation of other ion channels involves activation of PKA, we aimed to assess the contribution of MOP-sensitive pathways to the potentiation of TRPV1-mediated capsaicin responses by ethanol. Calcium responses elicited by the TRPV1 agonist capsaicin were potentiated by treatment with ethanol, but morphine was not able to inhibit ethanol-sensitised capsaicin responses. Indeed, cAMP-dependent PKA did not appear to contribute to potentiation of TRPV1 responses by ethanol, as the PKA inhibitor Rp-cAMPS did not inhibit ethanol-potentiated capsaicin responses. Similarly, treatment with specific PKC and PI3K inhibitors did not affect capsaicin responses in the presence of ethanol. However, treatment with wortmannin at concentrations reported to cause PIP2 depletion limited the ability of ethanol to sensitise TRPV1-mediated capsaicin responses. Among other plausible mechanisms, such as non-specific inhibition of kinases including mTOR, DNA-PK, MLCK, MAPK and polo-like kinases, this suggests that ethanol may affect the PIP2-TRPV1 interaction. This was confirmed by inhibition of ethanol-potentiation by the PLC inhibitor U73122. The results presented here suggest that morphine may be of limited use in inhibiting nociceptive TRPV1 responses that have been sensitised by exposure to ethanol.
...
PMID:Mechanisms involved in potentiation of transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 responses by ethanol. 1782

TRPV1 and TRPM8 are sensory nerve ion channels activated by heating and cooling, respectively. A variety of physical and chemical stimuli activate these receptors in a synergistic manner but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. Both channels are voltage sensitive, and temperature and ligands modulate this voltage dependence. Thus, a voltage-sensing mechanism has become an attractive model to explain the generalized gating of these and other thermo-sensitive TRP channels. We show here using whole-cell and single channel measurements that voltage produces only a partial activation of TRPV1 and TRPM8. At room temperature (20-25 degrees C) membrane depolarization evokes responses that saturate at approximately 50-60% of the maximum open probability. Furthermore, high concentrations of capsaicin (10 microm), resiniferatoxin (5 microm) and menthol (6 mm) reveal voltage-independent gating. Similarly, other modes of TRPV1 regulation including heat, protein kinase C-dependent phosphorylation, and protons enhance both the efficacy and sensitivity of voltage activation. In contrast, the TRPV1 antagonist capsazepine produces the opposite effects. These data can be explained by an allosteric model in which voltage, temperature, agonists and inverse agonists are independently coupled, either positively or negatively, to channel gating. Thus, voltage acts separately but in concert with other stimuli to regulate channel activation, and, therefore, a voltage-sensitive mechanism is unlikely to represent a final, gating mechanism for these channels.
...
PMID:Voltage is a partial activator of rat thermosensitive TRP channels. 1805 13

The neuropeptide substance P (SP) is expressed in unmyelinated primary sensory neurons and represents the best known "pain" neurotransmitter. It is generally believed that SP regulates pain transmission and sensitization by acting on neurokinin-1 receptor (NK-1), which is expressed in postsynaptic dorsal horn neurons. However, the expression and role of NK-1 in primary sensory neurons are not clearly characterized. Our data showed that NK-1 was expressed in both intact and dissociated dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons. In particular, NK-1 was mainly coexpressed with the capsaicin receptor TRPV1 (transient receptor potential vanilloid subtype 1), a critical receptor for the generation of heat hyperalgesia. NK-1 agonist [Sar(9), Met(O2)(11)]-substance P (Sar-SP) significantly potentiated capsaicin-induced currents and increase of [Ca2+]i in dissociated DRG neurons. NK-1 antagonist blocked not only the potentiation of TRPV1 currents but also heat hyperalgesia induced by intraplantar Sar-SP. NK-1 antagonist also inhibited capsaicin-induced spontaneous pain, and this inhibition was enhanced after inflammation. To analyze intracellular cross talking of NK-1 and TRPV1, we examined downstream signal pathways of G-protein-coupled NK-1 activation. Sar-SP-induced potentiation of TRPV1 was blocked by inhibition of G-protein, PLCbeta (phospholipase C-beta), or PKC but not by inhibition of PKA (protein kinase A). In particular, PKCepsilon inhibitor completely blocked both Sar-SP-induced TRPV1 potentiation and heat hyperalgesia. Sar-SP also induced membrane translocation of PKCepsilon in a portion of small DRG neurons. These results reveal a novel mechanism of NK-1 in primary sensory neurons via a possible autocrine and paracrine action of SP. Activation of NK-1 in these neurons induces heat hyperalgesia via PKCepsilon-mediated potentiation of TRPV1.
...
PMID:Neurokinin-1 receptor enhances TRPV1 activity in primary sensory neurons via PKCepsilon: a novel pathway for heat hyperalgesia. 1797 48

Pain hypersensitivity is a cardinal sign of tissue damage, but how molecules from peripheral tissues affect sensory neuron physiology is incompletely understood. Previous studies have shown that activin A increases after peripheral injury and is sufficient to induce acute nociceptive behavior and increase pain peptides in sensory ganglia. This study was designed to test the possibility that the enhanced nociceptive responsiveness associated with activin involved sensitization of transient receptor potential vanilloid I (TRPV1) in primary sensory neurons. Activin receptors were found widely distributed among adult sensory neurons, including those that also express the capsaicin receptor. Whole-cell patch-clamp recording from sensory neurons showed that activin acutely sensitized capsaicin responses and depended on activin receptor kinase activity. Pharmacological studies revealed that the activin sensitization of capsaicin responses required PKCepsilon signaling, but not PI3K (phosphoinositide 3-kinase), ERK (extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase), PKA, PKCalpha/beta, or Src. Furthermore, activin administration caused acute thermal hyperalgesia in wild-type mice, but not in TRPV1-null mice. These data suggest that activin signals through its own receptor, involves PKCepsilon signaling to sensitize the TRPV1 channel, and contributes to acute thermal hyperalgesia.
...
PMID:Activin acutely sensitizes dorsal root ganglion neurons and induces hyperalgesia via PKC-mediated potentiation of transient receptor potential vanilloid I. 1807 89

General anesthetics (GAs) are central nervous system depressants that render patients unresponsive to external stimuli. In contrast, many of these agents are also known to stimulate peripheral sensory nerves, raising the possibility that they may exacerbate tissue inflammation. We have found that pungent GAs excite sensory neurons by directly activating the transient receptor potential (TRP) A1 ion channel. Here, we show that GAs also sensitize the capsaicin receptor TRPV1, a key ion channel expressed in nociceptive neurons. Clinically relevant concentrations of isoflurane, sevoflurane, enflurane, and desflurane sensitize TRPV1 to capsaicin and protons and reduce the threshold for heat activation. Furthermore, isoflurane directly activates TRPV1 after stimulation of protein kinase C. Likewise, isoflurane excites TRPV1 and sensory neurons during concomitant application of bradykinin, a key inflammatory mediator formed during tissue injury. Thus, GAs can enhance the activation of TRPV1 that occurs during surgically induced tissue damage. These results support the hypothesis that some GAs, through direct actions at TRP channels, increase postsurgical pain and inflammation.
...
PMID:General anesthetics sensitize the capsaicin receptor transient receptor potential V1. 1876 35

The ability of vertebrates to detect and avoid damaging extremes of temperature depends on activation of ion channels belonging to the thermo-TRP family. Injury or inflammation causes the release of inflammatory mediators which lower the threshold for detection of painful levels of heat, a process known as heat hyperalgesia. These inflammatory mediators act by at least three distinct intracellular signaling pathways. Here, we show that modulation of the sensitivity of the heat-activated ion channel TRPV1 by the protein kinases PKA and PKC and by the phosphatase calcineurin depends on the formation of a signaling complex between these enzymes, the scaffolding protein AKAP79/150 and TRPV1. We identify a critical region in the TRPV1 C-terminal which mediates binding of AKAP79/150. If binding is prevented, then sensitization by both bradykinin and PGE(2) is abrogated. AKAP79/150 is therefore a final common element in heat hyperalgesia, on which the effects of multiple proinflammatory mediators converge.
...
PMID:Proinflammatory mediators modulate the heat-activated ion channel TRPV1 via the scaffolding protein AKAP79/150. 1870 Oct 70

The involvement of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in an augmented sensitivity to painful stimuli (hyperalgesia) during inflammation has been suggested, yet how and where ROS affect the pain signaling remain unknown. Here we report a novel role for the superoxide-generating NADPH oxidase in the development of hyperalgesia. In mice lacking Nox1 (Nox1(-/Y)), a catalytic subunit of NADPH oxidase, thermal and mechanical hyperalgesia was significantly attenuated, whereas no change in nociceptive responses to heat or mechanical stimuli was observed. In dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons of Nox1(+/Y), pretreatment with chemical mediators bradykinin, serotonin, or phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) augmented the capsaicin-induced calcium increase, whereas this increase was significantly attenuated in DRG neurons of Nox1(-/Y). Concomitantly, PMA-induced translocation of PKCepsilon was markedly perturbed in Nox1(-/Y) or Nox1(+/Y) DRG neurons treated with ROS-scavenging agents. In cells transfected with tagged PKCepsilon, hydrogen peroxide induced translocation and a reduction in free sulfhydryls of full-length PKCepsilon but not of the deletion mutant lacking the C1A domain. These findings indicate that NOX1/NADPH oxidase accelerates the translocation of PKCepsilon in DRG neurons, thereby enhancing the TRPV1 activity and the sensitivity to painful stimuli.
...
PMID:Reactive oxygen species derived from NOX1/NADPH oxidase enhance inflammatory pain. 1879 80

Preclinical studies suggest that the vanilloid receptor (TRPV1) is an important component of several disease areas such as pain (inflammatory, visceral, cancer and neuropathic), airway disease (including chronic cough), inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), interstitial cystitis, urinary incontinence, pancreatitis and migraine. TRPV1 is a member of a distinct subgroup of the transient receptor potential (TRP) family of ion channels. The neuronally expressed TRPV1 is a non-selective, Ca(2+)-preferring, cation channel. In addition to capsaicin, this channel is activated by a number of different stimuli including heat, acid, certain arachidonic acid derivatives and direct phosphorylation via protein kinase C (PKC). Moreover, there is also evidence that various inflammatory mediators such as adenosine triphosphate (ATP), bradykinin, nerve growth factor (NGF) or prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) may indirectly lead to activation of the TRPV1 channel via activation of their respective receptors. There is strong experimental evidence that the combination of direct and indirect mechanisms finely tune the TRPV1 activity. Each of the different known modes of direct TRPV1 activation (protons, heat and vanilloids) is capable of sensitising the channel to other agonists. Similarly, inflammatory mediators from the external milieu found in disease conditions can indirectly sensitise the receptor. It is this sensitisation of the TRPV1 receptor in inflammatory disease that could hold the key and contribute to the transduction of noxious signalling for normally innocuous stimuli, i.e. either hyperalgesia in the case of chronic pain or airway hyperresponsivness/hypertussive responses in patients with chronic cough. It seems reasonable to suggest that the various mechanisms for sensitisation provide a scenario for TRPV1 to be tonically active and this activity may contribute to the underlying pathology -- providing an important convergence point of multiple pain producing stimuli in the somatosensory system and multiple cough-evoking irritants in the airways. The complex mechanisms and pathways that contribute to the pathophysiology of chronic pain and chronic cough have made it difficult for clinicians to treat patients with current therapies. There is an increasing amount of evidence supporting the hypothesis that the expression, activation and modulation of TRPV1 in sensory neurones appears to be an integral component of pain and cough pathways, although the precise contribution of TRPV1 to human disease has yet to be determined. So the question remains open as to whether TRPV1 therapeutics will be efficacious and safe in man and represent a much needed novel pain and cough therapeutic.
...
PMID:TRPV1 receptors in sensitisation of cough and pain reflexes. 1914 28

TNFalpha plays a pivotal role in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) but little is known of the mechanisms that link the inflammatory and nociceptive effects of TNFalpha. We have established a murine model of TNFalpha-induced TRPV1-dependent bilateral thermal hyperalgesia that then allowed us to identify distinct peripheral mechanisms involved in mediating TNFalpha-induced ipsilateral and contralateral hyperalgesia. Thermal hyperalgesia and inflammation were assessed in both hindpaws following unilateral intraplantar (i.pl.) TNFalpha. The hyperalgesic mechanisms were analysed through pharmacogenetic approaches involving TRPV1(-/-) mice and TRPV1 antagonists. To study the mediators downstream of TNFalpha, cyclooxygenase (COX) and PKC inhibitors were utilised and cytokine and prostaglandin levels assessed. The role of neutrophils was determined through use of the selectin inhibitor, fucoidan. We show that TNFalpha (10pmol) causes thermal hyperalgesia (1-4h) in the ipsilateral inflamed and contralateral uninjured hindpaws, which is TRPV1-dependent. GF109203X, a PKC inhibitor, suppressed the hyperalgesia indicating that PKC is involved in TRPV1 sensitisation. Ipsilateral COX-2-derived prostaglandins were also crucial to the development of the bilateral hyperalgesia. The prevention of neutrophil accumulation with fucoidan attenuated hyperalgesia at 4 but not at 1h, indicating a role in the maintenance but not in the induction of bilateral hyperalgesia. However, TNFalpha-induced IL-1beta generation in both paws and the presence of local IL-1beta in the contralateral paw were essential for the development of bilateral hyperalgesia. These results identify a series of peripheral events through which TNFalpha triggers and maintains bilateral inflammatory pain. This potentially allows a better understanding of mechanisms involved in TNFalpha-dependent pain pathways in symmetrical diseases such as arthritis.
...
PMID:Tumour necrosis factor alpha mediates transient receptor potential vanilloid 1-dependent bilateral thermal hyperalgesia with distinct peripheral roles of interleukin-1beta, protein kinase C and cyclooxygenase-2 signalling. 1923 Oct 80

Transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV1) receptors are abundant in a subpopulation of primary sensory neurons that convey nociceptive information from the periphery to the spinal cord dorsal horn. The TRPV1 receptors are expressed on both the peripheral and central branches of these dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons and can be activated by capsaicin, heat, low pH, and also by recently described endogenous lipids. Using patch-clamp recordings from superficial dorsal horn (DH) neurons in acute spinal cord slices, the effect of application of the endogenous TRPV1 agonist N-oleoyldopamine (OLDA) on the frequency of miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents (mEPSCs) was evaluated. A high concentration OLDA (10 microM) solution was needed to increase the mEPSC frequency, whereas low concentration OLDA (0.2 microM) did not evoke any change under control conditions. The increase was blocked by the TRPV1 antagonists SB366791 or BCTC. Application of a low concentration of OLDA evoked an increase in mEPSC frequency after activation of protein kinase C by phorbol ester (PMA) and bradykinin or in slices from animals with peripheral inflammation. Increasing the bath temperature from 24 to 34 degrees C enhanced the basal mEPSC frequency, but the magnitude of changes in the mEPSC frequency induced by OLDA administration was similar at both temperatures. Our results suggest that presumed endogenous agonists of TRPV1 receptors, like OLDA, could have a considerable impact on synaptic transmission in the spinal cord, especially when TRPV1 receptors are sensitized. Spinal TRPV1 receptors could play a pivotal role in modulation of nociceptive signaling in inflammatory pain.
...
PMID:The role of the TRPV1 endogenous agonist N-Oleoyldopamine in modulation of nociceptive signaling at the spinal cord level. 1936 64


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>