I am a
Home I AM A Search Login

Papers of the Week


Papers: 21 Jan 2023 - 3 Feb 2023


2023 Jan 23


Elife


12

Chloride-dependent mechanisms of multimodal sensory discrimination and nociceptive sensitization in .

Authors

Himmel NJ, Sakurai A, Patel AA, Bhattacharjee S, Letcher JM, Benson MN, Gray TR, Cymbalyuk GS, Cox DN
Elife. 2023 Jan 23; 12.
PMID: 36688373.

Abstract

Individual sensory neurons can be tuned to many stimuli, each driving unique, stimulus-relevant behaviors, and the ability of multimodal nociceptor neurons to discriminate between potentially harmful and innocuous stimuli is broadly important for organismal survival. Moreover, disruptions in the capacity to differentiate between noxious and innocuous stimuli can result in neuropathic pain. larval Class III (CIII) neurons are peripheral noxious cold nociceptors and innocuous touch mechanosensors; high levels of activation drive cold-evoked contraction (CT) behavior, while low levels of activation result in a suite of touch-associated behaviors. However, it is unknown what molecular factors underlie CIII multimodality. Here, we show that the TMEM16/anoctamins and (; ) are required for cold-evoked CT, but not for touch-associated behavior, indicating a conserved role for anoctamins in nociception. We also evidence that CIII neurons make use of atypical depolarizing chloride currents to encode cold, and that overexpression of -a fly homologue of -results in phenotypes consistent with neuropathic sensitization, including behavioral sensitization and neuronal hyperexcitability, making CIII neurons a candidate system for future studies of the basic mechanisms underlying neuropathic pain.