21 research outputs found
Human keratinocytes are vanilloid resistant
BACKGROUND: Use of capsaicin or resiniferatoxin (RTX) as analgesics is an attractive therapeutic option. RTX opens the cation channel inflammatory pain/vanilloid receptor type 1 (TRPV1) permanently and selectively removes nociceptive neurons by Ca(2+)-cytotoxicity. Paradoxically, not only nociceptors, but non-neuronal cells, including keratinocytes express full length TRPV1 mRNA, while patient dogs and experimental animals that underwent topical treatment or anatomically targeted molecular surgery have shown neither obvious behavioral, nor pathological side effects. METHODS: To address this paradox, we assessed the vanilloid sensitivity of the HaCaT human keratinocyte cell line and primary keratinocytes from skin biopsies. RESULTS: Although both cell types express TRPV1 mRNA, neither responded to vanilloids with Ca(2+)-cytotoxicity. Only ectopic overproduction of TRPV1 rendered HaCaT cells sensitive to low doses (1-50 nM) of vanilloids. The TRPV1-mediated and non-receptor specific Ca(2+)-cytotoxicity ([RTX]>15 microM) could clearly be distinguished, thus keratinocytes were indeed resistant to vanilloid-induced, TRPV1-mediated Ca(2+)-entry. Having a wider therapeutic window than capsaicin, RTX was effective in subnanomolar range, but even micromolar concentrations could not kill human keratinocytes. Keratinocytes showed orders of magnitudes lower TRPV1 mRNA level than sensory ganglions, the bona fide therapeutic targets in human pain management. In addition to TRPV1, TRPV1b, a dominant negative splice variant was also noted in keratinocytes. CONCLUSION: TRPV1B expression, together with low TRPV1 expression, may explain the vanilloid paradox: even genuinely TRPV1 mRNA positive cells can be spared with therapeutic (up to micromolar) doses of RTX. This additional safety information might be useful for planning future human clinical trials
Fast two-photon in vivo imaging with three-dimensional random-access scanning in large tissue volumes
The understanding of brain computations requires methods
that read out neural activity on different spatial and temporal
scales. Following signal propagation and integration across
a neuron and recording the concerted activity of hundreds of
neurons pose distinct challenges, and the design of imaging
systems has been mostly focused on tackling one of the two
operations. We developed a high-resolution, acousto-optic
two-photon microscope with continuous three-dimensional
(3D) trajectory and random-access scanning modes that
reaches near-cubic-millimeter scan range and can be adapted
to imaging different spatial scales. We performed 3D calcium imaging of action potential backpropagation and dendritic spike forward propagation at sub-millisecond temporal
resolution in mouse brain slices. We also performed volumetric
random-access scanning calcium imaging of spontaneous and
visual stimulation–evoked activity in hundreds of neurons
of the mouse visual cortex in vivo. These experiments
demonstrate the subcellular and network-scale imaging
capabilities of our system