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Publication : Oxytocin Modulates Nociception as an Agonist of Pain-Sensing TRPV1.

First Author  Nersesyan Y Year  2017
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  21
Issue  6 Pages  1681-1691
PubMed ID  29117570 Mgi Jnum  J:254564
Mgi Id  MGI:6103914 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2017.10.063
Citation  Nersesyan Y, et al. (2017) Oxytocin Modulates Nociception as an Agonist of Pain-Sensing TRPV1. Cell Rep 21(6):1681-1691
abstractText  Oxytocin is a hormone with various actions. Oxytocin-containing parvocellular neurons project to the brainstem and spinal cord. Oxytocin release from these neurons suppresses nociception of inflammatory pain, the molecular mechanism of which remains unclear. Here, we report that the noxious stimulus receptor TRPV1 is an ionotropic oxytocin receptor. Oxytocin elicits TRPV1 activity in native and heterologous expression systems, regardless of the presence of the classical oxytocin receptor. In TRPV1 knockout mice, DRG neurons exhibit reduced oxytocin sensitivity relative to controls, and oxytocin injections significantly attenuate capsaicin-induced nociception in in vivo experiments. Furthermore, oxytocin potentiates TRPV1 in planar lipid bilayers, supporting a direct agonistic action. Molecular modeling and simulation experiments provide insight into oxytocin-TRPV1 interactions, which resemble DkTx. Together, our findings suggest the existence of endogenous regulatory pathways that modulate nociception via direct action of oxytocin on TRPV1, implying its analgesic effect via channel desensitization.
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