4.8 Article

Warm-coding deficits and aberrant inflammatory pain in mice lacking P2X3 receptors

Journal

NATURE
Volume 407, Issue 6807, Pages 1015-1017

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/35039526

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ATP activates damage-sensing neurons (nociceptors) and can evoke a sensation of pain(1). The ATP receptor P2X(3) is selectively expressed by nociceptors(2,3) and is one of seven ATP-gated, cation-selective ion channels(4-6). Here we demonstrate that ablation of the P2X(3) gene results in the loss of rapidly desensitizing ATP-gated cation currents in dorsal root ganglion neurons, and that the responses of nodose ganglion neurons to ATP show altered kinetics and pharmacology resulting from the loss of expression of P2X(2/3) heteromultimers. Null mutants have normal sensorimotor function. Behavioural responses to noxious mechanical and thermal stimuli are also normal, although formalin-induced pain behaviour is reduced. In contrast, deletion of the P2X(3) receptor causes enhanced thermal hyperalgesia in chronic inflammation. Notably, although dorsal-horn neuronal responses to mechanical and noxious heat application are normal, P2X(3)-null mice are unable to code the intensity of non-noxious 'warming' stimuli.

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