Pharmacological blockade of TRPA1 inhibits mechanical firing in nociceptors.

Mol Pain

Department of Cell Biology, Neurobiology and Anatomy, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI 53226, USA.

Published: April 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • TRPA1 plays a crucial role in sensory responses, affecting how we perceive both damaging chemicals and mechanical stimuli in the skin.
  • The selective TRPA1 antagonist HC-030031 significantly reduces responses to formalin and mechanical forces in C fibers but does not affect TRPV1 or A-delta fibers.
  • The findings indicate that TRPA1 is essential for the activation of sensory neurons in the skin when exposed to painful chemicals or strong mechanical pressure.

Article Abstract

Background: TRPA1 has been implicated in both chemo- and mechanosensation. Recent work demonstrates that inhibiting TRPA1 function reduces mechanical hypersensitivity produced by inflammation. Furthermore, a broad range of chemical irritants require functional TRPA1 to exert their effects. In this study we use the ex-vivo skin-nerve preparation to directly determine the contribution of TRPA1 to mechanical- and chemical-evoked responses at the level of the primary afferent terminal.

Results: Acute application of HC-030031, a selective TRPA1 antagonist, inhibited all formalin responses in rat C fibers but had no effect on TRPV1 function, assessed by capsaicin responsiveness. Genetic ablation experiments corroborated the pharmacological findings as C fibers from wild type mice responded to both formalin and capsaicin, but fibers from their TRPA1-deficient littermates responded only to capsaicin. HC-030031 markedly reduced the mechanically-evoked action potential firing in rat and wild type mouse C fibers, particularly at high-intensity forces, but had no effect on the mechanical responsiveness of Adelta fiber nociceptors. Furthermore, HC-030031 had no effect on mechanically-evoked firing in C fibers from TRPA1-deficient mice, indicating that HC-030031 inhibits mechanically-evoked firing via a TRPA1-dependent mechanism.

Conclusion: Our data show that acute pharmacological blockade of TRPA1 at the cutaneous receptive field inhibits formalin-evoked activation and markedly reduces mechanically-evoked action potential firing in C fibers. Thus, functional TRPA1 at sensory afferent terminals in skin is required for their responsiveness to both noxious chemical and mechanical stimuli.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2681449PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1744-8069-5-19DOI Listing

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