Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0009443 (cold)
92,137 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

TRPA1 and TRPM8 are transient receptor potential (TRP) channels involved in sensory perception. TRPA1 is a non-selective calcium permeable channel activated by irritants and proalgesic agents. TRPM8 reacts to chemical cooling agents such as menthol. The human neuroblastoma cell line IMR-32 undergoes a remarkable differentiation in response to treatment with 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine. The cells acquire a neuronal morphology with increased expression of N-type voltage gated calcium channels and neurotransmitters. Here we show using RT-PCR, that mRNA for TRPA1 and TRPM8 are strongly upregulated in differentiating IMR-32 cells. Using whole cell patch clamp recordings, we demonstrate that activators of these channels, wasabi, allyl-isothiocyanate (AITC) and menthol activate membrane currents in differentiated cells. Calcium imaging experiments demonstrated that AITC mediated elevation of intracellular calcium levels were attenuated by ruthenium red, spermine, and HC-030031 as well as by siRNA directed against the channel. This indicates that the detected mRNA level correlate with the presence of functional channels of both types in the membrane of differentiated cells. Although the differentiated IMR-32 cells responded to cooling many of the cells showing this response did not respond to TRPA1/TRPM8 channel activators (60% and 90% for AITC and menthol respectively). Conversely many of the cells responding to these activators did not respond to cooling (30%). This suggests that these channels have also other functions than cold perception in these cells. Furthermore, our results suggest that IMR-32 cells have sensory characteristics and can be used to study native TRPA1 and TRPM8 channel function as well as developmental expression.
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PMID:Differentiation dependent expression of TRPA1 and TRPM8 channels in IMR-32 human neuroblastoma cells. 1950 92

The TRPA1 agonist mustard oil (allyl isothiocyanate=AITC) induces heat hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia in human skin and sensitizes rat spinal wide dynamic range (WDR) neuronal responses to noxious skin heating. We presently used electrophysiological methods to investigate if AITC affects the responsiveness of individual spinal WDR neurons to intense skin cooling. Recordings were made from cold-sensitive WDR neurons in lamina I and deeper dorsal horn; 21/23 also responded to noxious skin heating. Topical application of AITC excited 8/18 units and significantly enhanced their responses to noxious heat while not significantly affecting responses to the cold stimulus. Vehicle (mineral oil) had no effect on thermal responses. The data confirm a role for the TRPA1 agonist AITC in enhancing heat nociception without significantly affecting cold sensitivity.
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PMID:Mustard oil enhances spinal neuronal responses to noxious heat but not cooling. 1954 7

Mammalian heat pain perception is well documented as a molecular event in the primary afferent neurons expressing TRPV1. Six types of thermo-TRPs were found, i.e., TRPV1-4, TRPM8 and TRPA1. The former TRPV1, 2 and TRPV3, 4 are sensitive to noxious heat and warmth, and the latter two are sensitive to cool or cold, respectively. We attempted to provide a hypothesis to explain the paradox in which TRPV1 knockout mice and capsaicin-pretreated mice with severe loss of small dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons behave normally to noxious heat. From the general view that TRPV1 is preferentially expressed in C-fibers responding to a moderate thermal threshold (>43 degrees C) and TRPV2 in Adelta-fibers to high threshold temperatures (>52 degrees C), the above phenomenon is perplexing. Woodbury et al. (J Neurosci 24:6410-6415, 2004) offered two pain transduction mechanisms, one being TRPV1/2-independent and the other TRPV1-dependent. The former detects noxious heat under normal conditions without the presence of TRPV1 or TRPV2, and the latter requires TRPV1 under pathophysiological conditions. Unidentified isolectin B4 (IB4)-positive but TRPV1-negative small neurons with a higher noxious heat threshold are feasible, because a spliced isoform of TRPV1 responsive to noxious heat (47 degrees C) but not responsive to either proton or capsaicin is present in human and rat sensory neurons. Thus, the IB4-positive but TRPV1-negative small sensory neurons must have a crucial role in the noxious heat response.
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PMID:Is thermal nociception only sensed by the capsaicin receptor, TRPV1? 1956 39

Sensing environmental temperature is one of the most important fundamental functions of the living things on the earth. Recently, it has been revealed that several members of the TRP ion channel super family are activated by temperature changes. A number of reports clearly demonstrate that thermal activation of these thermosensitive TRP channels contributes to various temperature-dependent responses in vivo, such as thermosensation, thermotaxis, and the regulation of cellular/tissue functions at physiological body temperature. Nine TRP channels have been reported to respond to a physiological range of temperatures in mammals. TRPV1 and TRPV2 expressed in nociceptive neurons are activated by heat (> 43 degrees C and > 52 degrees C, respectively), and TRPV1-null mice show defects in sensing noxious heat. TRPV3 and TRPV4 are predominantly expressed in skin keratinocytes rather than in sensory neurons, and the gene knock-out of each channel causes abnormal thermotaxis in vivo. TRPM8, which senses cold temperatures (< 27 degrees C), is expressed in nociceptive and non-nociceptive neurons and its loss impairs cold sensitivity. TRPA1 is expressed in nociceptive neurons and acts as a sensor for various harmful stimuli, whereas its responsiveness to noxious cold stimuli is controversial even after the analysis of mice lacking the channel. Other thermoTRPs, TRPM2, TRPM4, and TRPM5 are not expressed in sensory neurons, and are reportedly involved in several functions at physiological body temperatures including insulin secretion, taste sensation, and immune response. In this review, I summarize the molecular mechanisms of thermosensation in mammals by focusing on thermosensitive TRP channels.
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PMID:[Molecular mechanisms underlying thermosensation in mammals]. 1961 65

Sensory nerves of the urinary bladder consist of small diameter A(delta) and C fibers running in the hypogastic and pelvic nerves. Neuroanatomical studies have revealed a complex neuronal network within the bladder wall. Electrophysiological recordings in vitro and in vivo have revealed several distinct classes of afferent fibers that may signal a wide range of bladder stimulations including physiological bladder filling, noxious distension, cold, chemical irritation and inflammation. The exact mechanisms that underline mechanosensory transduction in bladder afferent terminals remain ambiguous; however, a wide range of ion channels (e.g., TTX-resistant Na(+) channels, Kv channels and hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channels) and receptors (e.g., TRPV1, TRPM8, TRPA1, P2X(2/3), etc) have been identified at bladder afferent terminals and implicated in the generation and modulation of afferent signals. Experimental investigations have revealed that expression and/or function of these ion channels and receptors may be altered in animal models and patients with overactive and painful bladder disorders. Some of these ion channels and receptors may be potential therapeutic targets for bladder diseases.
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PMID:Ion channel and receptor mechanisms of bladder afferent nerve sensitivity. 1963 6

Three sensory systems, olfaction, taste, and somatosensation, are dedicated to the detection of chemicals in the environment. Trigeminal somatosensory neurons enable us to detect a wide range of environmental stimuli, including pressure, temperature, and chemical irritants, within the oral and nasal mucosa. Natural plant-derived irritants have served as powerful pharmacological tools for identifying receptors underlying somatosensation. This is illustrated by the use of capsaicin, menthol, and wasabi to identify the heat-sensitive ion channel TRPV1, the cold-sensitive ion channel TRPM8, and the irritant receptor TRPA1, respectively. In addition to TRP channels, members of the two-pore potassium channel family have also been implicated in trigeminal chemosensation. KCNK18 was recently identified as a target for hydroxy-alpha-sanshool, the tingling and numbing compound produced in Schezuan peppers and other members of the Xanthoxylum genus. The role of these channels in trigeminal thermosensation and pain will be discussed.
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PMID:Molecular and cellular mechanisms of trigeminal chemosensation. 1968 35

Agonists of the TRPV1 receptor excite TRPV1-expressing polymodal nociceptors that is followed after higher doses by a state of diminished responsiveness called desensitization which ensues at two levels: (i) diminished responsiveness of the ion channel (TRPV1 receptor desensitization); (ii) diminished responsiveness of the nerve endings to all stimuli including noxious heat. The aim was to compare these desensitizing actions of TRPV1 agonists in the rat by measuring with an incremental hot/cold plate the noxious heat and cold thresholds, i.e. the lowest hot and highest cold plate temperature, respectively, that evokes nocifensive behaviour. Capsaicin (3.3-1000 nmol) or resiniferatoxin (0.016-0.5 nmol) applied intraplantarly evoked a sustained dose-dependent elevation of the noxious heat threshold lasting for 2-11 days. N-oleoyldopamine failed to elevate the heat threshold. The noxious cold threshold was decreased by capsaicin or resiniferatoxin with a recovery within 2-4 days. The diminished acute nocifensive and heat threshold-lowering effects of resiniferatoxin or N-oleoyldopamine by pretreatment with doses that failed to elevate the heat threshold and to alter the nocifensive action of the TRPA1 activator formaldehyde, were taken as indication of TRPV1 receptor desensitization. In conclusion, using measurement of threshold temperatures eliciting nocifensive reactions in rats both in the hot and cold range revealed that capsaicin and RTX impair thermosensation in both noxious ranges due to a functional desensitization of peripheral terminals of TRPV1-expressing sensory neurons responsible for noxious heat and cold responsiveness. This could be differentiated from desensitization of TRPV1 receptor evoked by lower doses of resiniferatoxin or N-oleoyldopamine.
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PMID:Antinociceptive desensitizing actions of TRPV1 receptor agonists capsaicin, resiniferatoxin and N-oleoyldopamine as measured by determination of the noxious heat and cold thresholds in the rat. 1980 Feb 72

Recent studies have suggested the expression of numerous heat-sensitive transient receptor potential (TRP) ion channels in non-neuronal cell populations of the skin. In this issue, Atoyan et al. provide evidence that the noxious cold-activated TRPA1 is widely expressed in various human cutaneous cells and that it may be directly involved in the regulation of keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation and in cutaneous inflammatory responses.
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PMID:An "ice-cold" TR(i)P to skin biology: the role of TRPA1 in human epidermal keratinocytes. 1928 36

Cold allodynia is a common feature of neuropathic pain however the underlying mechanisms of this enhanced sensitivity to cold are not known. Recently the transient receptor potential (TRP) channels TRPM8 and TRPA1 have been identified and proposed to be molecular sensors for cold. Here we have investigated the expression of TRPM8 and TRPA1 mRNA in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and examined the cold sensitivity of peripheral sensory neurons in the chronic construction injury (CCI) model of neuropathic pain in mice.In behavioral experiments, chronic constriction injury (CCI) of the sciatic nerve induced a hypersensitivity to both cold and the TRPM8 agonist menthol that developed 2 days post injury and remained stable for at least 2 weeks. Using quantitative RT-PCR and in situ hybridization we examined the expression of TRPM8 and TRPA1 in DRG. Both channels displayed significantly reduced expression levels after injury with no change in their distribution pattern in identified neuronal subpopulations. Furthermore, in calcium imaging experiments, we detected no alterations in the number of cold or menthol responsive neurons in the DRG, or in the functional properties of cold transduction following injury. Intriguingly however, responses to the TRPA1 agonist mustard oil were strongly reduced.Our results indicate that injured sensory neurons do not develop abnormal cold sensitivity after chronic constriction injury and that alterations in the expression of TRPM8 and TRPA1 are unlikely to contribute directly to the pathogenesis of cold allodynia in this neuropathic pain model.
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PMID:The contribution of TRPM8 and TRPA1 channels to cold allodynia and neuropathic pain. 1981 88

Inhibitor kappaB kinase (IKK) regulates the activity of the transcription factor nuclear factor-kappa B that normally protects neurons against excitotoxicity. Constitutively active IKK is enriched at axon initial segments and nodes of Ranvier (NR). We used mice with a Cre-loxP-mediated specific deletion of IKKbeta in sensory neurons of the dorsal root ganglion (SNS-IKKbeta(-/-)) to evaluate whether IKK plays a role in sensory neuron excitability and nociception. We observed increased sensitivity to mechanical, cold, noxious heat and chemical stimulation in SNS-IKKbeta(-/-) mice, with normal proprioceptive and motor functions as revealed by gait analysis. This was associated with increased calcium influx and increased inward currents in small- and medium-sized primary sensory neurons of SNS-IKKbeta(-/-) mice during stimulation with capsaicin or Formalin, specific activators of transient receptor potentials TRPV1 and TRPA1 calcium channels, respectively. In vitro stimulation of saphenous nerve preparations of SNS-IKKbeta(-/-) mice showed increased neuronal excitability of A- and C-fibers but unchanged A- and C-fiber conduction velocities, normal voltage-gated sodium channel currents, and normal accumulation of ankyrin G and the sodium channels Nav1.6 at NR. The results suggest that IKKbeta functions as a negative modulator of sensory neuron excitability, mediated at least in part by modulation of TRP channel sensitivity.
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PMID:Inhibitor kappaB Kinase beta deficiency in primary nociceptive neurons increases TRP channel sensitivity. 1982 6


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