Vanilloid type 1 receptor and the acid-sensing ion channel mediate acid phosphate activation of muscle afferent nerves in rats.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Reflex cardiovascular responses to contracting skeletal muscle are mediated by mechanical and metabolic stimulation of thin-fiber muscle afferents. Diprotonated phosphate (H2PO4-) excites those thin-fiber nerves and evokes the muscle pressor reflex. The receptors mediating this response are unknown. Thus we examined the role played by purinergic receptors, vanilloid type 1 receptors (VR1), and acid-sensing ion channels (ASIC) in mediating H2PO4- -evoked pressor responses. Phosphate and blocking agents were injected into the arterial blood supply of the hindlimb muscles of 53 decerebrated rats. H2PO4- (86 mM, pH 6.0) increased mean arterial pressure by 25 +/- 2 mmHg, whereas monoprotonated phosphate (HPO4(2-), pH 7.5) had no effect. Pyridoxalphosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulfonic acid (a purinergic receptor antagonist, 2 mM) did not block the response. However, capsazepine (a VR1 antagonist, 1 mg/kg) attenuated the reflex by 60% and amiloride (an ASIC blocker, 6 microg/kg) by 52%. Of note, the H2PO4- -induced pressor response was attenuated by 87% when both capsazepine and amiloride were injected before the H2PO4-. In conclusion, VR1 and ASIC mediate the pressor response due to H2PO4-. The H2PO4- -evoked response was greater when VR1 and ASIC blockers were given simultaneously than when the respective blockers were given separately. Our laboratory's previous study has shown that H+ stimulates ASIC (but not VR1) on thin-fiber afferent nerves in evoking the reflex response. Thus VR1 and ASIC are likely to play a coordinated and interactive role in processing the muscle afferent response to H2PO4-. Furthermore, the physiological mechanisms mediating the response to H+ and H2PO4- are likely to be different.
منابع مشابه
Muscle pressor reflex: potential role of vanilloid type 1 receptor and acid-sensing ion channel.
Reflex cardiovascular responses to muscle contraction are mediated by mechanical and metabolic stimulation of thin muscle afferent fibers. Metabolic stimulants and receptors involved in responses are uncertain. Capsaicin depolarizes thin sensory afferent nerves that have vanilloid type 1 receptors (VR1). Among potential endogenous ligands of thin fibers, H+ has been suggested as a metabolite me...
متن کاملEffect of deep tissue incision on pH responses of afferent fibers and dorsal root ganglia innervating muscle.
BACKGROUND Understanding the mechanisms underlying deep tissue pain in the postoperative period is critical to improve therapies. Using the in vitro plantar flexor digitorum brevis muscle-nerve preparation and patch clamp recordings from cultured dorsal root ganglia neurons innervating incised and unincised muscle, the authors investigated responses to various pH changes. METHODS Incision inc...
متن کاملAcid-sensing channels in human bladder: expression, function and alterations during bladder pain syndrome.
PURPOSE We examined the possible role of H(+) activated acid-sensing ion channels in pain perception. We characterized expression in bladder dome biopsies from patients with bladder pain syndrome and controls, in cultured human urothelium and in urothelial TEU-2 cells. MATERIALS AND METHODS Cold cut biopsies from the bladder dome were obtained in 8 asymptomatic controls and 28 patients with b...
متن کاملRole for NGF in augmented sympathetic nerve response to activation of mechanically and metabolically sensitive muscle afferents in rats with femoral artery occlusion.
Arterial blood pressure and heart rate responses to static contraction of the hindlimb muscles are greater in rats whose femoral arteries were previously ligated than in control rats. Also, the prior findings demonstrate that nerve growth factor (NGF) is increased in sensory neurons-dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons of occluded rats. However, the role for endogenous NGF in engagement of the au...
متن کاملCalcium entry via TRPV1 but not ASICs induces neuropeptide release from sensory neurons.
Inflammatory mediators induce neuropeptide release from nociceptive nerve endings and cell bodies, causing increased local blood flow and vascular leakage resulting in edema. Neuropeptide release from sensory neurons depends on an increase in intracellular Ca(2+) concentration. In this study we investigated the role of two types of pH sensors in acid-induced Ca(2+) entry and neuropeptide releas...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of applied physiology
دوره 100 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2006