Literature DB >> 12132648

Comparison of capsaicin-evoked calcium transients between rat nodose and jugular ganglion neurons.

Eleanor Chung1, Qihai Gu, Kevin Kwong, Warwick A Arden, Lu-Yuan Lee.   

Abstract

The objectives of this study were to describe the size distribution of capsaicin-sensitive neurons in nodose and jugular ganglia and to determine whether there is a difference in capsaicin sensitivity between these two types of ganglia. Functional identification was made by measurement of the capsaicin-evoked calcium (Ca2+) transients in cultured vagal sensory neurons of young adult Sprague-Dawley rats using the Fura-2-based ratiometric imaging technique. In the first study series, cells on the second day of culture were perfused with capsaicin solution (10(-7) M) for 15 s, and the Ca2+ transients were continuously recorded before, during, and after the capsaicin challenge. Out of 603 viable neurons, 57.5% were capsaicin-sensitive; the percentages of capsaicin-sensitive cells in the nodose and jugular ganglia were 59.8% and 55.4%, respectively. Capsaicin sensitivity predominated in the small- and medium-sized neurons; the capsaicin-sensitive cells generally had a diameter less than 35 microm in both types of ganglia. Although the results did not indicate any differences in the size distribution of capsaicin-sensitive neurons between the two ganglia, results of our second study series showed that a near-maximal concentration of capsaicin (3 x 10(-6) M) evoked a significantly greater peak Ca2+ transient in jugular neurons (382.5 +/- 85.5 nM) than in nodose neurons (134.3 +/- 17.5 nM). In summary, our results showed that an increase in cell diameter was accompanied by a decreasing trend in percentage of capsaicin-sensitive neurons in both vagal ganglia. Capsaicin at high concentration evoked a greater peak Ca2+ transient in jugular ganglion neurons, despite no difference in the responses to KCl between these two types of ganglion neurons.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12132648     DOI: 10.1016/s1566-0702(02)00045-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Auton Neurosci        ISSN: 1566-0702            Impact factor:   3.145


  7 in total

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  7 in total

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