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Three functionally distinct classes of C-fibre nociceptors in primates

  • Matthew Wooten
  • , Hao Jui Weng
  • , Timothy V. Hartke
  • , Jasenka Borzan
  • , Amanda H. Klein
  • , Brian Turnquist
  • , Xinzhong Dong
  • , Richard A. Meyer
  • , Matthias Ringkamp
  • Johns Hopkins University
  • Bethel University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

90 Scopus citations

Abstract

In primates, C-fibre polymodal nociceptors are broadly classified into two groups based on mechanosensitivity. Here we demonstrate that mechanically sensitive polymodal nociceptors that respond either quickly (QC) or slowly (SC) to a heat stimulus differ in responses to a mild burn, heat sensitization, conductive properties and chemosensitivity. Superficially applied capsaicin and intradermal injection of Î 2-alanine, an MrgprD agonist, excite vigorously all QCs. Only 40% of SCs respond to β-alanine, and their response is only half that of QCs. Mechanically insensitive C-fibres (C-MIAs) are β-alanine insensitive but vigorously respond to capsaicin and histamine with distinct discharge patterns. Calcium imaging reveals that β-alanine and histamine activate distinct populations of capsaicin-responsive neurons in primate dorsal root ganglion. We suggest that histamine itch and capsaicin pain are peripherally encoded in C-MIAs, and that primate polymodal nociceptive afferents form three functionally distinct subpopulations with β-alanine responsive QC fibres likely corresponding to murine MrgprD-expressing, non-peptidergic nociceptive afferents.

Original languageEnglish
Article number4122
JournalNature Communications
Volume5
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 20 2014

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