4.4 Article

A tingling sanshool derivative excites primary sensory neurons and elicits nocifensive behavior in rats

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 105, Issue 4, Pages 1701-1710

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00922.2010

Keywords

calcium imaging; dorsal root ganglion cell; transient receptor potential channels; capsaicin

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [DE-013685, AR-057194]

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Klein AH, Sawyer CM, Zanotto KL, Ivanov MA, Cheung S, Carstens MI, Furrer S, Simons CT, Slack JP, Carstens E. A tingling sanshool derivative excites primary sensory neurons and elicits nocifensive behavior in rats. J Neurophysiol 105: 1701-1710, 2011. First published January 27, 2011; doi: 10.1152/jn.00922.2010.-Szechuan peppers contain hydroxy-alpha-sanshool that imparts desirable tingling, cooling, and numbing sensations. Hydroxy-alpha-sanshool activates a subset of sensory dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons by inhibiting two-pore potassium channels. We presently investigated if a tingle-evoking sanshool analog, isobutylalkenyl amide (IBA), excites rat DRG neurons and, if so, if these neurons are also activated by agonists of TRPM8, TRPA1, and/or TRPV1. Thirty-four percent of DRG neurons tested responded to IBA, with 29% of them also responding to menthol, 29% to cinnamic aldehyde, 66% to capsaicin, and subsets responding to two or more transient receptor potential (TRP) agonists. IBA-responsive cells had similar size distributions regardless of whether they responded to capsaicin or not; cells only responsive to IBA were larger. Responses to repeated application of IBA at a 5-min interstimulus interval exhibited self-desensitization (tachyphylaxis). Capsaicin did not cross-desensitize responses to IBA to any greater extent than the tachyphylaxis observed with repeated IBA applications. These findings are consistent with psychophysical observations that IBA elicits tingle sensation accompanied by pungency and cooling, with self-desensitization but little cross-desensitization by capsaicin. Intraplantar injection of IBA elicited nocifensive responses (paw licking, shaking-flinching, and guarding) in a dose-related manner similar to the effects of intraplantar capsaicin and serotonin. IBA had no effect on thermal sensitivity but enhanced mechanical sensitivity at the highest dose tested. These observations suggest that IBA elicits an unfamiliar aversive sensation that is expressed behaviorally by the limited response repertoire available to the animal.

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