| Literature DB >> 12654248 |
Gina M Story1, Andrea M Peier, Alison J Reeve, Samer R Eid, Johannes Mosbacher, Todd R Hricik, Taryn J Earley, Anne C Hergarden, David A Andersson, Sun Wook Hwang, Peter McIntyre, Tim Jegla, Stuart Bevan, Ardem Patapoutian.
Abstract
Mammals detect temperature with specialized neurons in the peripheral nervous system. Four TRPV-class channels have been implicated in sensing heat, and one TRPM-class channel in sensing cold. The combined range of temperatures that activate these channels covers a majority of the relevant physiological spectrum sensed by most mammals, with a significant gap in the noxious cold range. Here, we describe the characterization of ANKTM1, a cold-activated channel with a lower activation temperature compared to the cold and menthol receptor, TRPM8. ANKTM1 is a distant family member of TRP channels with very little amino acid similarity to TRPM8. It is found in a subset of nociceptive sensory neurons where it is coexpressed with TRPV1/VR1 (the capsaicin/heat receptor) but not TRPM8. Consistent with the expression of ANKTM1, we identify noxious cold-sensitive sensory neurons that also respond to capsaicin but not to menthol.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12654248 DOI: 10.1016/s0092-8674(03)00158-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582