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Human Stem Cell-Derived TRPV1-Positive Sensory Neurons: A New Tool to Study Mechanisms of Sensitization

Somatosensation, the detection and transduction of external and internal stimuli such as temperature or mechanical force, is vital to sustaining our bodily integrity. But still, some of the mechanisms of distinct stimuli detection and transduction are not entirely understood, especially when noxious...

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Autores principales: Schrenk-Siemens, Katrin, Pohle, Jörg, Rostock, Charlotte, Abd El Hay, Muad, Lam, Ruby M., Szczot, Marcin, Lu, Shiying, Chesler, Alexander T., Siemens, Jan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9497105/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36139481
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11182905
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author Schrenk-Siemens, Katrin
Pohle, Jörg
Rostock, Charlotte
Abd El Hay, Muad
Lam, Ruby M.
Szczot, Marcin
Lu, Shiying
Chesler, Alexander T.
Siemens, Jan
author_facet Schrenk-Siemens, Katrin
Pohle, Jörg
Rostock, Charlotte
Abd El Hay, Muad
Lam, Ruby M.
Szczot, Marcin
Lu, Shiying
Chesler, Alexander T.
Siemens, Jan
author_sort Schrenk-Siemens, Katrin
collection PubMed
description Somatosensation, the detection and transduction of external and internal stimuli such as temperature or mechanical force, is vital to sustaining our bodily integrity. But still, some of the mechanisms of distinct stimuli detection and transduction are not entirely understood, especially when noxious perception turns into chronic pain. Over the past decade major progress has increased our understanding in areas such as mechanotransduction or sensory neuron classification. However, it is in particular the access to human pluripotent stem cells and the possibility of generating and studying human sensory neurons that has enriched the somatosensory research field. Based on our previous work, we describe here the generation of human stem cell-derived nociceptor-like cells. We show that by varying the differentiation strategy, we can produce different nociceptive subpopulations with different responsiveness to nociceptive stimuli such as capsaicin. Functional as well as deep sequencing analysis demonstrated that one protocol in particular allowed the generation of a mechano-nociceptive sensory neuron population, homogeneously expressing TRPV1. Accordingly, we find the cells to homogenously respond to capsaicin, to become sensitized upon inflammatory stimuli, and to respond to temperature stimulation. The efficient and homogenous generation of these neurons make them an ideal translational tool to study mechanisms of sensitization, also in the context of chronic pain.
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spelling pubmed-94971052022-09-23 Human Stem Cell-Derived TRPV1-Positive Sensory Neurons: A New Tool to Study Mechanisms of Sensitization Schrenk-Siemens, Katrin Pohle, Jörg Rostock, Charlotte Abd El Hay, Muad Lam, Ruby M. Szczot, Marcin Lu, Shiying Chesler, Alexander T. Siemens, Jan Cells Article Somatosensation, the detection and transduction of external and internal stimuli such as temperature or mechanical force, is vital to sustaining our bodily integrity. But still, some of the mechanisms of distinct stimuli detection and transduction are not entirely understood, especially when noxious perception turns into chronic pain. Over the past decade major progress has increased our understanding in areas such as mechanotransduction or sensory neuron classification. However, it is in particular the access to human pluripotent stem cells and the possibility of generating and studying human sensory neurons that has enriched the somatosensory research field. Based on our previous work, we describe here the generation of human stem cell-derived nociceptor-like cells. We show that by varying the differentiation strategy, we can produce different nociceptive subpopulations with different responsiveness to nociceptive stimuli such as capsaicin. Functional as well as deep sequencing analysis demonstrated that one protocol in particular allowed the generation of a mechano-nociceptive sensory neuron population, homogeneously expressing TRPV1. Accordingly, we find the cells to homogenously respond to capsaicin, to become sensitized upon inflammatory stimuli, and to respond to temperature stimulation. The efficient and homogenous generation of these neurons make them an ideal translational tool to study mechanisms of sensitization, also in the context of chronic pain. MDPI 2022-09-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9497105/ /pubmed/36139481 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11182905 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Schrenk-Siemens, Katrin
Pohle, Jörg
Rostock, Charlotte
Abd El Hay, Muad
Lam, Ruby M.
Szczot, Marcin
Lu, Shiying
Chesler, Alexander T.
Siemens, Jan
Human Stem Cell-Derived TRPV1-Positive Sensory Neurons: A New Tool to Study Mechanisms of Sensitization
title Human Stem Cell-Derived TRPV1-Positive Sensory Neurons: A New Tool to Study Mechanisms of Sensitization
title_full Human Stem Cell-Derived TRPV1-Positive Sensory Neurons: A New Tool to Study Mechanisms of Sensitization
title_fullStr Human Stem Cell-Derived TRPV1-Positive Sensory Neurons: A New Tool to Study Mechanisms of Sensitization
title_full_unstemmed Human Stem Cell-Derived TRPV1-Positive Sensory Neurons: A New Tool to Study Mechanisms of Sensitization
title_short Human Stem Cell-Derived TRPV1-Positive Sensory Neurons: A New Tool to Study Mechanisms of Sensitization
title_sort human stem cell-derived trpv1-positive sensory neurons: a new tool to study mechanisms of sensitization
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9497105/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36139481
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11182905
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