نتایج جستجو برای: trpv1

تعداد نتایج: 3396  

2012
Fumio Tsuji Hiroyuki Aono

Transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1), a non-selective cation channel, is a receptor activated by high temperatures and chemical agonists such as the vanilloids and protons. Because of these properties, TRPV1 has emerged as a polymodal nocisensor of nociceptive afferent neurons. TRPV1 is thought to be a central transducer of hyperalgesia and a prime target for controlling pain pharma...

Journal: :The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics 2012
Regina M Reilly Heath A McDonald Pamela S Puttfarcken Shailen K Joshi LaGeisha Lewis Madhavi Pai Pamela H Franklin Jason A Segreti Torben R Neelands Ping Han Jun Chen Patrick W Mantyh Joseph R Ghilardi Teresa M Turner Eric A Voight Jerome F Daanen Robert G Schmidt Arthur Gomtsyan Michael E Kort Connie R Faltynek Philip R Kym

The transient receptor potential vanilloid-1 (TRPV1) channel is involved in the development and maintenance of pain and participates in the regulation of temperature. The channel is activated by diverse agents, including capsaicin, noxious heat (≥ 43°C), acidic pH (< 6), and endogenous lipids including N-arachidonoyl dopamine (NADA). Antagonists that block all modes of TRPV1 activation elicit h...

Journal: :The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics 2008
Sonya G Lehto Rami Tamir Hong Deng Lana Klionsky Rongzhen Kuang April Le Doo Lee Jean-Claude Louis Ella Magal Barton H Manning John Rubino Sekhar Surapaneni Nuria Tamayo Tingrong Wang Judy Wang Jue Wang Weiya Wang Brad Youngblood Maosheng Zhang Dawn Zhu Mark H Norman Narender R Gavva

Antagonists of the vanilloid receptor TRPV1 (transient receptor potential vanilloid type 1) have been reported to produce antihyperalgesic effects in animal models of pain. These antagonists, however, also caused concomitant hyperthermia in rodents, dogs, monkeys, and humans. Antagonist-induced hyperthermia was not observed in TRPV1 knockout mice, suggesting that the hyperthermic effect is excl...

Journal: :Cancer research 2010
Mun Kyung Hwang Ann M Bode Sanguine Byun Nu Ry Song Hyong Joo Lee Ki Won Lee Zigang Dong

Epidemiologic and animal studies revealed that capsaicin can act as a carcinogen or cocarcinogen. However, the molecular mechanisms of the cancer-promoting effects of capsaicin are not clear. Here, we report that capsaicin has a cocarcinogenic effect on 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-promoted skin carcinogenesis in vivo and is mediated through the epidermal growth factor receptor (E...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2008
Debashree Mukherjea Sarvesh Jajoo Craig Whitworth Jennifer R Bunch Jeremy G Turner Leonard P Rybak Vickram Ramkumar

Cisplatin, a chemotherapeutic agent of choice for the treatment of solid tumors, produces hearing loss in approximately half a million new cancer patients annually in the United States. The hearing loss is due, in part, to increased generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the cochlea, leading to lipid peroxidation and damage or death of outer hair cells in the organ of Corti. The cochlea...

Journal: :Journal of neuroscience research 2007
Johanna Lilja Frida Laulund Anna Forsby

The capsaicin receptor, transient receptor potential, vanilloid type 1 (TRPV1), is a Ca(2+)-permeable ion channel activated by noxious stimuli eliciting pain. Several reports have shown modulation of TRPV1 activity and expression by neuronal growth factors. Here, we study the long-term effects on TRPV1 expression mediated by insulin-like growth factor type-I (IGF-I) and insulin in a stably TRPV...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2013
Philia Gau Jason Poon Carmen Ufret-Vincenty Corey D Snelson Sharona E Gordon David W Raible Ajay Dhaka

The ability to detect hot temperatures is critical to maintaining body temperature and avoiding injury in diverse animals from insects to mammals. Zebrafish embryos, when given a choice, actively avoid hot temperatures and display an increase in locomotion similar to that seen when they are exposed to noxious compounds such as mustard oil. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that the single zebrafis...

2014
Seyoung Ahn Jungyun Park Inkyung An Sung Jun Jung Jungwook Hwang

A mammalian cell renovates itself by autophagy, a process through which cellular components are recycled to produce energy and maintain homeostasis. Recently, the abundance of gap junction proteins was shown to be regulated by autophagy during starvation conditions, suggesting that transmembrane proteins are also regulated by autophagy. Transient receptor potential vanilloid type 1 (TRPV1), an ...

Journal: :Biochimica et biophysica acta 2016
Iulia I Nita Yaki Caspi Sagi Gudes Dimitri Fishman Shaya Lev Michal Hersfinkel Israel Sekler Alexander M Binshtok

The nociceptive noxious heat-activated receptor - TRPV1, conducts calcium and sodium, thus producing a depolarizing receptor potential, leading to activation of nociceptive neurons. TRPV1-mediated calcium and sodium influx is negatively modulated by calcium, via calcium-dependent desensitization of TRPV1 channels. A mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter - MCU, controls mitochondrial Ca2+ entry while a s...

2015
Miren-Josune Canduela Juan Mendizabal-Zubiaga Nagore Puente Leire Reguero Izaskun Elezgarai Almudena Ramos-Uriarte Inmaculada Gerrikagoitia Pedro Grandes

We have recently shown that the transient receptor potential vanilloid type 1 (TRPV1), a non-selective cation channel in the peripheral and central nervous system, is localized at postsynaptic sites of the excitatory perforant path synapses in the hippocampal dentate molecular layer (ML). In the present work, we have studied the distribution of TRPV1 at inhibitory synapses in the ML. With this ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید