Publications by authors named "Dinah Nockemann"

The patch clamp is a valuable electrophysiological technique, which allows the study of single or multiple ion channels in cells, and it is particularly useful in testing the excitable cells such as neurons. Activation of neuronal opioid receptors results in the modulation of various ion channels, which enables to examine the receptors' action with the patch clamp. In this chapter, we analyze the activation of the G-protein-coupled inwardly rectifying potassium channel 2 by opioids, and the capsaicin-induced transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 channel currents during opioid withdrawal, using the whole cell patch clamp in transfected human embryonic kidney 293 cells as well as in mouse and rat primary dorsal root ganglion neurons.

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As the activation of opioid receptors leads to the modulation of potassium and calcium channels, the ion imaging represents an attractive method to analyze the function of the receptors. Here, we describe the imaging of potassium using the FluxOR™ potassium ion channel assay, and of calcium using Fura-2 acetoxymethyl ester. Specifically, we (1) characterize the activation of the G-protein-coupled inwardly rectifying potassium 2 channel by agonists of μ- and δ-opioid receptors with the aid of the FluxOR™ assay in cultured mouse dorsal root ganglion neurons, and (2) describe calcium imaging protocols to measure capsaicin-induced transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 channel activity during opioid withdrawal in transfected human embryonic kidney 293 cells.

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The use of opioid agonists acting outside the central nervous system (CNS) is a promising therapeutic strategy for pain control that avoids deleterious central side effects such as apnea and addiction. In human clinical trials and rat models of inflammatory pain, peripherally restricted opioids have repeatedly shown powerful analgesic effects; in some mouse models however, their actions remain unclear. Here, we investigated opioid receptor coupling to K(+) channels as a mechanism to explain such discrepancies.

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