[PDF][PDF] DEG/ENaC but not TRP channels are the major mechanoelectrical transduction channels in a C. elegans nociceptor

SL Geffeney, JG Cueva, DA Glauser, JC Doll, THC Lee… - Neuron, 2011 - cell.com
SL Geffeney, JG Cueva, DA Glauser, JC Doll, THC Lee, M Montoya, S Karania, AM Garakani
Neuron, 2011cell.com
Many nociceptors detect mechanical cues, but the ion channels responsible for
mechanotransduction in these sensory neurons remain obscure. Using in vivo recordings
and genetic dissection, we identified the DEG/ENaC protein, DEG-1, as the major
mechanotransduction channel in ASH, a polymodal nociceptor in Caenorhabditis elegans.
But DEG-1 is not the only mechanotransduction channel in ASH: loss of deg-1 revealed a
minor current whose properties differ from those expected of DEG/ENaC channels. This …
Summary
Many nociceptors detect mechanical cues, but the ion channels responsible for mechanotransduction in these sensory neurons remain obscure. Using in vivo recordings and genetic dissection, we identified the DEG/ENaC protein, DEG-1, as the major mechanotransduction channel in ASH, a polymodal nociceptor in Caenorhabditis elegans. But DEG-1 is not the only mechanotransduction channel in ASH: loss of deg-1 revealed a minor current whose properties differ from those expected of DEG/ENaC channels. This current was independent of two TRPV channels expressed in ASH. Although loss of these TRPV channels inhibits behavioral responses to noxious stimuli, we found that both mechanoreceptor currents and potentials were essentially wild-type in TRPV mutants. We propose that ASH nociceptors rely on two genetically distinct mechanotransduction channels and that TRPV channels contribute to encoding and transmitting information. Because mammalian and insect nociceptors also coexpress DEG/ENaCs and TRPVs, the cellular functions elaborated here for these ion channels may be conserved.
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