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Low‐threshold heat response antagonized by capsazepine in chick sensory neurons, which are capsaicin‐insensitive
Author(s) -
MarínBurgin Antonia,
Reppenhagen Stephan,
Klusch Andreas,
Wendland Jens R.,
Petersen Marlen
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1046/j.1460-9568.2000.00275.x
Subject(s) - capsaicin , capsazepine , dorsal root ganglion , chemistry , sensory neuron , trpv1 , biophysics , receptor , antagonist , sensory system , biology , neuroscience , biochemistry , transient receptor potential channel
The heat‐transducing receptor VR1 cloned from rat sensory neurons can be activated by both noxious heat and capsaicin. As the response of sensory neurons to capsaicin is species dependent, it is conceivable that the responses to noxious heat and to capsaicin are transduced by distinct receptors across different species. Therefore, we investigated responses to noxious heat from a capsaicin‐insensitive (chick) and a capsaicin‐sensitive (rat) species. In chick, whole‐cell patch‐clamp experiments in isolated dorsal root ganglion neurons revealed two populations of neurons with different thresholds to noxious heat, activated at ≈ 43 °C and ≈ 53 °C. In cobalt uptake experiments, the proportion of neurons showing a heat‐induced response increased with increasing heat stimuli. Application of capsaicin (1–10 μ m ) did not result in inward currents or cobalt uptake. Rat neurons yielded comparable results in heat experiments, but were capsaicin‐sensitive. Although chick neurons are insensitive to capsaicin, the competitive capsaicin antagonist capsazepine (1–10 μ m ) was effective in blocking heat‐induced responses, verified by patch‐clamp and cobalt uptake methods. The noncompetitive capsaicin antagonist ruthenium red (10 μ m ) reduced to almost nil the proportion of heat‐responsive neurons identified with the cobalt uptake method. These findings suggest that chick DRG neurons express a low‐threshold heat‐transducing receptor with a pharmacological profile distinct from the low‐threshold heat receptor VR1 cloned from rat DRG neurons. The data support the idea that there might be heat receptor subtypes with differences in the capsaicin binding site.