Journal article

Primary Afferent Activation of Thermosensitive TRPV1 Triggers Asynchronous Glutamate Release at Central Neurons

JH Peters, SJ McDougall, JA Fawley, SM Smith, MC Andresen

Neuron | Published : 2010

Abstract

TRPV1 receptors feature prominently in nociception of spinal primary afferents but are also expressed in unmyelinated cranial visceral primary afferents linked to homeostatic regulation. Cranial visceral afferents enter the brain at the solitary tract nucleus (NTS) to control the heart, lungs, and other vital organs. Here we identify a role for central TRPV1 in the activity-dependent facilitation of glutamatergic transmission from solitary tract (ST) afferents. Fast, synchronous ST-NTS transmission from capsaicin-sensitive (TRPV1+) and -insensitive (TRPV1-) afferents was similar. However, afferent activation triggered long-lasting asynchronous glutamate release only from TRPV1+ synapses. Asy..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Institutes of Health


Funding Acknowledgements

We thank Craig Jahr for comments on an early version of the manuscript. J.H.P., J.A.F., S.M.S., and M.C.A. are funded by the National Institutes of Health, U.S.A. S.J.M. is funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. The authors declare no competing financial interests.