A capsaicin-receptor homologue with a high threshold for noxious heat

MJ Caterina, TA Rosen, M Tominaga, AJ Brake… - Nature, 1999 - nature.com
MJ Caterina, TA Rosen, M Tominaga, AJ Brake, D Julius
Nature, 1999nature.com
Pain-producing heat is detected by several classes of nociceptive sensory neuron that differ
in their thermal response thresholds,,. The cloned capsaicin receptor, also known as the
vanilloid receptor subtype 1 (VR1), is a heat-gated ion channel that has been proposed to
mediate responses of small-diameter sensory neurons to moderate (43° C) thermal stimuli,.
VR1 is also activated by protons, indicating that it may participate in the detection of noxious
thermal and chemical stimuli in vivo. Here we identify a structurally related receptor, VRL-1 …
Abstract
Pain-producing heat is detected by several classes of nociceptive sensory neuron that differ in their thermal response thresholds,,. The cloned capsaicin receptor, also known as the vanilloid receptor subtype 1 (VR1), is a heat-gated ion channel that has been proposed to mediate responses of small-diameter sensory neurons to moderate (43 °C) thermal stimuli,. VR1 is also activated by protons, indicating that it may participate in the detection of noxious thermal and chemical stimuli in vivo. Here we identify a structurally related receptor, VRL-1, that does not respond to capsaicin, acid or moderate heat. Instead, VRL-1 is activated by high temperatures, with a threshold of ∼52 °C. Within sensory ganglia, VRL-1 is most prominently expressed by a subset of medium- to large-diameter neurons, making it a candidate receptor for transducing high-threshold heat responses in this class of cells. VRL-1 transcripts are not restricted to the sensory nervous system, indicating that this channel may be activated by stimuli other than heat. We propose that responses to noxious heat involve these related, but distinct, ion-channel subtypes that together detect a range of stimulus intensities.
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