Nociceptor subtypes and their incidence in rat lumbar dorsal root ganglia (DRGs): focussing on C-polymodal nociceptors, A?-nociceptors, moderate pressure receptors and their receptive field depths
Author | Lawson S.N. |
Author | Fang X. |
Author | Djouhri L. |
Available date | 2020-04-09T07:35:02Z |
Publication Date | 2019 |
Publication Name | Current Opinion in Physiology |
Resource | Scopus |
ISSN | 24688681 |
Abstract | A recent study with Ca++-sensitive-dyes in neurons in whole DRGs (Table 5) found that much lower percentages of nociceptors were polymodal-nociceptors (PMNs) (Emery et al., 2016), than the 50–80% values in many electrophysiological fiber studies. This conflict highlighted the lack of knowledge about percentages of nociceptor-subtypes in the DRG. This was analysed from intracellularly-recorded neurons in rat lumbar DRGs stimulated from outside the skin. Polymodal nociceptors (PMNs) were 11% of all neurons and 19% of all nociceptors. Most PMNs had C-fibers (CPMNs). Percentages of C-nociceptors that were CPMNs varied with receptive field (RF) depths, whether superficial (∼80%), dermal (25%), deep (0%) or cutaneous (superficial + dermal) (40%). This explains CPMN percentages 40–90%, being highest, in electrophysiological studies using cutaneous nerves, and lowest in studies that also include deep RFs, including ours, and the recent Ca++-imaging studies in whole DRGs. Despite having been originally described in 1967 (Burgess and Perl), both Aβ-nociceptors and Aβ-moderate pressure receptors (MPRs) remain overlooked. Most A-fiber nociceptors in rodents have Aβ-fibers. Of rat lumbar Aβ-nociceptors with superficial RFs, 50% were MPRs with variable medium-low trkA-expression. Despite having conduction velocities at the two extremes for nociceptors, both CPMNs and MPRs have relatively low thresholds, superficial/epidermal RFs and low trkA-expression. For abbreviations used see Table 5. |
Sponsor | The recordings and immunocytochemistry were carried out in the University of Bristol, UK, funded by The Wellcome Trust (Grant number 06842 ), and the British Biological Science Research Council (BBSRC) (Grant number 7/S14627 ). Papers on this research are published. This analysis of the data is novel. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Elsevier Ltd |
Subject | C-polymodal nociceptors A?-nociceptors moderate pressure receptors dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) |
Type | Article Review |
Pagination | 125-146 |
Volume Number | 11 |
Check access options
Files in this item
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
-
Medicine Research [1549 items ]