1.Update on dentin hypersensitivity: with the focus on hydrodynamic theory and mechanosensitive ion channels
International Journal of Oral Biology 2019;44(3):71-76
Dentin hypersensitivity is an abrupt intense pain caused by innocuous stimuli to exposed dentinal tubules. Mechanosensitive ion channels have been assessed in dental primary afferent neurons and odontoblasts to explain dentin hypersensitivity. Dentinal fluid dynamics evoked by various stimuli to exposed dentin cause mechanical stress to the structures underlying dentin. This review briefly discusses three hypotheses regarding dentin hypersensitivity and introduces recent findings on mechanosensitive ion channels expressed in the dental sensory system and discusses how the activation of these ion channels is involved in dentin hypersensitivity.
Dental Physiological Phenomena
;
Dentin Sensitivity
;
Dentin
;
Dentinal Fluid
;
Hydrodynamics
;
Ion Channels
;
Mechanoreceptors
;
Neurons, Afferent
;
Odontoblasts
;
Stress, Mechanical
2.Changes in Gastrointestinal Physiology in Obese Patients
So Hee YUN ; Jong Kyu PARK ; Jeong Eun SHIN ;
Korean Journal of Medicine 2019;94(5):403-409
Obesity is a prevalent disease with significant morbidity and mortality. It is a state of chronic low-grade inflammation due to excess body fat. Weight homeostasis is maintained through changes in various gastrointestinal hormones caused by dietary intake. However, being overweight or obese breaks the balance of these appetite-related gastrointestinal hormones and creates resistance to the actions of these hormones. The sensitivity of vagal afferent neurons to peripheral signals becomes blunted. Cytokines produced by excessive fat tissue damage our normal immune system, making us vulnerable to infection. In addition, various changes in gastrointestinal motility occur. Therefore, this review focuses on the various changes in gastrointestinal hormones, the immune state, the vagus nerve, and gastrointestinal movement in obese patients.
Adipose Tissue
;
Cytokines
;
Gastrointestinal Hormones
;
Gastrointestinal Motility
;
Homeostasis
;
Humans
;
Immune System
;
Inflammation
;
Mortality
;
Neurons, Afferent
;
Obesity
;
Overweight
;
Physiology
;
Vagus Nerve
3.Effect of carbamazepine on tetrodotoxin-resistant Na⁺ channels in trigeminal ganglion neurons innervating to the dura.
Jin Eon HAN ; Jin Hwa CHO ; Michiko NAKAMURA ; Maan Gee LEE ; Il Sung JANG
The Korean Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology 2018;22(6):649-660
Migraine is a neurological disorder characterized by recurrent and disabling severe headaches. Although several anticonvulsant drugs that block voltage-dependent Na⁺ channels are widely used for migraine, far less is known about the therapeutic actions of carbamazepine on migraine. In the present study, therefore, we characterized the effects of carbamazepine on tetrodotoxin-resistant (TTX-R) Na⁺ channels in acutely isolated rat dural afferent neurons, which were identified by the fluorescent dye DiI. The TTX-R Na⁺ currents were measured in medium-sized DiIpositive neurons using the whole-cell patch clamp technique in the voltage-clamp mode. While carbamazepine had little effect on the peak amplitude of transient Na⁺ currents, it strongly inhibited steady-state currents of transient as well as persistent Na⁺ currents in a concentration-dependent manner. Carbamazepine had only minor effects on the voltage-activation relationship, the voltage-inactivation relationship, and the use-dependent inhibition of TTX-R Na⁺ channels. However, carbamazepine changed the inactivation kinetics of TTX-R Na⁺ channels, significantly accelerating the development of inactivation and delaying the recovery from inactivation. In the current-clamp mode, carbamazepine decreased the number of action potentials without changing the action potential threshold. Given that the sensitization of dural afferent neurons by inflammatory mediators triggers acute migraine headaches and that inflammatory mediators potentiate TTX-R Na⁺ currents, the present results suggest that carbamazepine may be useful for the treatment of migraine headaches.
Action Potentials
;
Animals
;
Anticonvulsants
;
Carbamazepine*
;
Headache
;
Kinetics
;
Migraine Disorders
;
Nervous System Diseases
;
Neurons*
;
Neurons, Afferent
;
Rats
;
Sodium Channels
;
Trigeminal Ganglion*
4.Neurologic Mechanisms Underlying Voiding Dysfunction due to Prostatitis in a Rat Model of Nonbacterial Prostatic Inflammation.
Jee Soo PARK ; Mei Hua JIN ; Chang Hee HONG
International Neurourology Journal 2018;22(2):90-98
PURPOSE: The neurological molecular mechanisms underlying the voiding dysfunction associated with nonbacterial chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome remain poorly understood. In this study, we assessed whether prostate inflammation activated bladder afferent neurons, leading to bladder dysfunction, and sought to elucidate the underlying mechanisms. METHODS: Thirty male Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into 3 groups: sham-saline, formalin-injected, and capsaicin-pretreated and formalin-injected. Chemical prostatitis was induced by 0.1 mL of 10% buffered formalin injected into the ventral prostate. Capsaicin was injected subcutaneously to desensitize capsaicin-sensitive nerves. In each group, conscious cystometry was performed, and c-fos expression within the spinal cord was determined immunocytochemically. Double immunofluorescent staining with c-fos and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) was performed. On the third day after pseudorabies virus (PRV) infection, c-fos and PRV double-staining was performed. RESULTS: Intraprostatic formalin significantly increased the maximal voiding pressure and decreased the intercontraction interval, compared with controls. Pretreatment with capsaicin significantly reversed these effects. More c-fos-positive cells were observed in the sacral parasympathetic nucleus (SPN) and dorsal gray commissure (DCM) in the prostatitis group than in the sham group. c-fos-positive cells decreased in the capsaicin-pretreated group. Preganglionic neurons labeled by c-fos and ChAT were observed in the SPN in rats with prostatitis. Interneurons labeled by c-fos and PRV were identified in the DCM after PRV infection. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that prostate inflammation activates afferent nerve fibers projecting to the lumbosacral spinal cord, producing reflex activation of spinal neurons innervating the bladder and bladder hyperreflexia. This is mediated by capsaicin-sensitive prostate afferent neurons.
Animals
;
Capsaicin
;
Choline O-Acetyltransferase
;
Formaldehyde
;
Herpesvirus 1, Suid
;
Humans
;
Inflammation*
;
Interneurons
;
Male
;
Models, Animal*
;
Nerve Fibers
;
Neurons
;
Neurons, Afferent
;
Pelvic Pain
;
Prostate
;
Prostatitis*
;
Rats*
;
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
;
Reflex
;
Reflex, Abnormal
;
Spinal Cord
;
Urinary Bladder
5.Ginger and Its Pungent Constituents Non-Competitively Inhibit Serotonin Currents on Visceral Afferent Neurons.
Zhenhua JIN ; Goeun LEE ; Sojin KIM ; Cheung Seog PARK ; Yong Seek PARK ; Young Ho JIN
The Korean Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology 2014;18(2):149-153
Nausea and emesis are a major side effect and obstacle for chemotherapy in cancer patients. Employ of antiemetic drugs help to suppress chemotherapy-induced emesis in some patients but not all patients. Ginger, an herbal medicine, has been traditionally used to treat various kinds of diseases including gastrointestinal symptoms. Ginger is effective in alleviating nausea and emesis, particularly, for cytotoxic chemotherapy drug-induced emesis. Ginger-mediated antiemetic effect has been attributed to its pungent constituents-mediated inhibition of serotonin (5-HT) receptor activity but its cellular mechanism of action is still unclear. Emetogenic chemotherapy drugs increase 5-HT concentration and activate visceral vagal afferent nerve activity. Thus, 5-HT mediated vagal afferent activation is essential to provoke emesis during chemotherapy. In this experiment, water extract of ginger and its three major pungent constituent's effect on 5-HT-evoked responses were tested on acutely dispersed visceral afferent neurons with patch-clamp methods. The ginger extract has similar effects to antiemetic drug ondansetron by blocking 5-HT-evoked responses. Pungent constituents of the ginger, [6]-shogaol, [6]-gingerol, and zingerone inhibited 5-HT responses in a dose dependent manner. The order of inhibitory potency for these compounds were [6]-shogaol>[6]-gingerol>zingerone. Unlike well-known competitive 5-HT3 receptor antagonist ondansetron, all tested ginger constituents acted as non-competitive antagonist. Our results imply that ginger and its pungent constituents exert antiemetic effects by blocking 5-HT-induced emetic signal transmission in vagal afferent neurons.
Antiemetics
;
Drug Therapy
;
Ginger*
;
Herbal Medicine
;
Humans
;
Nausea
;
Neurons*
;
Neurons, Afferent
;
Ondansetron
;
Receptors, Serotonin, 5-HT3
;
Serotonin*
;
Visceral Afferents*
;
Vomiting
;
Water
6.Melanocortin-4 receptor expression in the rostral ventromedial medulla involved in modulation of nociception in transgenic mice.
Xu-chu PAN ; Yong-tang SONG ; Cheng LIU ; Hong-bing XIANG ; Chuan-jian LU
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2013;33(2):195-198
The rostral ventromedial medulla (RVM) is a prominent component of the descending modulatory system involved in the control of spinal nociceptive transmission. In the current study, we investigated melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) expression in the RVM, where the neurons involved in modulation of nociception reside. Using a line of mice expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP) under the control of the MC4R promoter, we found a large number of GFP-positive neurons in the RVM [nucleus raphe magnus (NRM) and nucleus gigantocellularis pars α (NGCα)]. Fluorescence immunohistochemistry revealed that approximately 10% of MC4R-GFP-positive neurons coexpressed tyrosine hydroxylase, indicating that they were catecholaminergic, whereas 50%-75% of those coexpressed tryptophan hydroxylase, indicating that they were serotonergic. Our findings support the hypothesis that MC4R signaling in RVM may modulate the activity of serotonergic sympathetic outflow sensitive to nociceptive signals, and that MC4R signaling in RVM may contribute to the descending modulation of nociceptive transmission.
Animals
;
Female
;
Male
;
Medulla Oblongata
;
cytology
;
metabolism
;
Mice
;
Mice, Transgenic
;
Neural Pathways
;
cytology
;
metabolism
;
Neurons, Afferent
;
cytology
;
metabolism
;
Nociception
;
physiology
;
Receptor, Melanocortin, Type 4
;
genetics
;
metabolism
;
Serotonergic Neurons
;
metabolism
;
Tyrosine 3-Monooxygenase
;
metabolism
7.Neurochemical Properties of Dental Primary Afferent Neurons.
Hue VANG ; Gehoon CHUNG ; Hyun Yeong KIM ; Seok Beom PARK ; Sung Jun JUNG ; Joong Soo KIM ; Seog Bae OH
Experimental Neurobiology 2012;21(2):68-74
The long belief that dental primary afferent (DPA) neurons are entirely composed of nociceptive neurons has been challenged by several anatomical and functional investigations. In order to characterize non-nociceptivepopulation among DPA neurons, retrograde transport fluorescent dye was placed in upper molars of rats and immunohistochemical detection of peripherin and neurofilament 200 in the labeled trigeminal ganglia was performed. As the results, majority ofDPA neurons were peripherin-expressing small-sized neurons, showing characteristic ofnociceptive C-fibers. However, 25.7% of DPA were stained with antibody against neurofilament 200, indicating significant portion of DPA neurons are related to large myelinated Abeta fibers. There were a small number of neurons thatexpressed both peripherin and neurofilament 200, suggestive of Adelta fibers. The possible transition of neurochemical properties by neuronal injury induced by retrograde labeling technique was ruled out by detection of minimal expression of neuronal injury marker, ATF-3. These results suggest that in addition to the large population of C-fiber-related nociceptive neurons, a subset of DPA neurons is myelinated large neurons, which is related to low-threshold mechanosensitive Abeta fibers. We suggest that these Abeta fiber-related neurons might play a role as mechanotransducers of fluid movement within dentinal tubules.
Animals
;
Dentin
;
Intermediate Filament Proteins
;
Membrane Glycoproteins
;
Molar
;
Myelin Sheath
;
Nerve Tissue Proteins
;
Neurofilament Proteins
;
Neurons
;
Neurons, Afferent
;
Nociceptors
;
Rats
;
Trigeminal Ganglion
8.Mechanism of Interdigestive Migrating Motor Complex.
Journal of Neurogastroenterology and Motility 2012;18(3):246-257
Migrating motor complex (MMC) is well characterized by the appearance of gastrointestinal contractions in the interdigestive state. This review article discussed the mechanism of gastrointestinal MMC. Luminal administration of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) initiates duodenal phase II followed by gastrointestinal phase III with a concomitant increase of plasma motilin release in conscious dogs. Duodenal 5-HT concentration is increased during gastric phase II and phase III. Intravenous infusion of motilin increases luminal 5-HT content and induces gastrointestinal phase III. 5-HT4 antagonists significantly inhibits both of gastric and intestinal phase III, while 5-HT3 antagonists inhibited only gastric phase III. These suggest that gastrointestinal MMC cycle is mediated via the interaction between motilin and 5-HT by the positive feedback mechanism. Gastric MMC is regulated via vagus, 5-HT3/4 receptors and motilin, while intestinal MMC is regulated via intrinsic primary afferent neurons and 5-HT4 receptors. Stress is highly associated with the pathogenesis of functional dyspepsia. Acoustic stress attenuates gastric phase III without affecting intestinal phase III in conscious dogs, via reduced vagal activity and increased sympathetic activity. It has been shown that subset of functional dyspepsia patients show reduced vagal activity and impaired gastric phase III. The physiological importance of gastric MMC is a mechanical and chemical cleansing of the empty stomach in preparation for the next meal. The impaired gastric MMC may aggravate dyspeptic symptoms following a food ingestion. Thus, maintaining gastric MMC in the interdigestive state is an important factor to prevent the postprandial dyspeptic symptoms.
Acoustics
;
Animals
;
Autonomic Pathways
;
Contracts
;
Dogs
;
Dyspepsia
;
Eating
;
Enterochromaffin Cells
;
Humans
;
Infusions, Intravenous
;
Meals
;
Motilin
;
Myoelectric Complex, Migrating
;
Neurons, Afferent
;
Phenobarbital
;
Plasma
;
Receptors, Serotonin, 5-HT4
;
Serotonin
;
Serotonin 5-HT3 Receptor Antagonists
;
Serotonin 5-HT4 Receptor Antagonists
;
Stomach
9.Long term depression of the recurrent inhibition of monosynaptic spinal reflexes after sciatic nerve crush in adult rats.
Liang SHU ; You-Rong DONG ; Wei-Hong YAN ; Yu ZHAI ; Yun WANG ; Wei LI
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2011;63(4):291-299
Sciatic nerve injury is a common disease of peripheral nerve in clinic. After nerve injury, there are many dysfunctions in motoneurons and muscles following regeneration. Previous studies mostly investigated the aspects related to the injured nerve, and the effect on the recurrent inhibition (RI) pathway of spine following regeneration was not fully understood. Following reinnervation after temporary sciatic nerve crush, the functional alteration of RI was studied. In adult rats, RI between lateral gastrocnemius-soleus (LG-S) and medial gastrocnemius (MG) motor pools was assessed by conditioning monosynaptic reflexes (MSRs) elicited from the cut dorsal roots and recorded from either the LG-S or MG nerves by antidromic stimulation of the synergist muscle nerve. The following results were obtained. (1) The RI of MSRs in rats was almost lost (<5 weeks) after sciatic nerve crush. Although the RI partially recovered following reinnervation (6 weeks), it remained permanently depressed (up to 14 weeks). (2) Sciatic nerve crush on one side did not affect the contralateral RI. (3) Sciatic nerve crush did not induce any motoneuron loss revealed by immunohistochemistry. Peripheral nerve temporary disconnection causes long term alterations in RI pathway which make up motoneuron's function enhance for the alteration of muscle power and suggests that peripheral nerve injury induces long term plastic changes in the spinal motoneuron circuitry.
Animals
;
Long-Term Synaptic Depression
;
physiology
;
Male
;
Motor Neurons
;
physiology
;
Nerve Crush
;
Nerve Regeneration
;
physiology
;
Neuronal Plasticity
;
physiology
;
Neurons, Afferent
;
physiology
;
Rats
;
Rats, Wistar
;
Reflex, Monosynaptic
;
physiology
;
Sciatic Nerve
;
injuries
;
physiopathology
;
Spinal Cord
;
physiopathology
;
Spinal Nerve Roots
;
physiopathology
10.Slow rise of intracellular Ca(2+) concentration in rat primary sensory neurons triggered by loureirin B.
Yi-Ning YANG ; Jue-Xu CHEN ; Xue-Yan PANG ; Susumu TERAKAWA ; Xu CHEN ; Yong-Hua JI ; Ke-Lan YONG
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2009;61(2):115-120
In the present study, the intracellular free calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in acutely isolated rat dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons modulated by loureirin B, an active component of "dragon's blood" which is a kind of Chinese herbal medicine, was determined by the means of Fura-2 based microfluorimetry. It was found that loureirin B could evoke the elevation of [Ca(2+)](i) in a dose-dependent manner. However, the elevation of [Ca(2+)](i) evoked in the calcium free solution was much smaller than that in the standard external cell solution, suggesting that most change of [Ca(2+)](i) was generated by the influx of extracellular Ca(2+), not by the activities of intracellular organelles like Ca(2+) stores and mitochondria. In addition, the mixture of loureirin B and caffeine also induced [Ca(2+)](i) rise, but the peak of [Ca(2+)](i) rise induced by the mixture was significantly lower than that by caffeine alone, which means the triggering pathway and the targets of caffeine are probably involved in loureirin B-induced [Ca(2+)](i) rise. Moreover, compared to the transients induced by caffeine, KCl and capsaicin, the loureirin B-induced [Ca(2+)](i) rise is much slower and more stable. These results indicate that the capability of loureirin B of inducing the [Ca(2+)](i) rise is solid and unique.
Animals
;
Caffeine
;
pharmacology
;
Calcium
;
metabolism
;
Ganglia, Spinal
;
drug effects
;
metabolism
;
Neurons, Afferent
;
drug effects
;
metabolism
;
Rats
;
Resins, Plant
;
pharmacology

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