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Publication : ASIC2a and ASIC3 heteromultimerize to form pH-sensitive channels in mouse cardiac dorsal root ganglia neurons.

First Author  Hattori T Year  2009
Journal  Circ Res Volume  105
Issue  3 Pages  279-86
PubMed ID  19590043 Mgi Jnum  J:164935
Mgi Id  MGI:4835641 Doi  10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.109.202036
Citation  Hattori T, et al. (2009) ASIC2a and ASIC3 heteromultimerize to form pH-sensitive channels in mouse cardiac dorsal root ganglia neurons. Circ Res 105(3):279-86
abstractText  RATIONALE: Acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) are Na+ channels that are activated by acidic pH. Their expression in cardiac afferents and remarkable sensitivity to small pH changes has made them leading candidates to sense cardiac ischemia. OBJECTIVE: Four genes encode six different ASIC subunits, however it is not yet clear which of the ASIC subunits contribute to the composition of ASICs in cardiac afferents. METHODS AND RESULTS: Here, we labeled cardiac afferents using a retrograde tracer dye in mice, which allowed for patch-clamp studies of murine cardiac afferents. We found that a higher percentage of cardiac sensory neurons from the dorsal root ganglia respond to acidic pH and generated larger currents compared to those from the nodose ganglia. The ASIC-like current properties of the cardiac dorsal root ganglia neurons from wild-type mice most closely matched the properties of ASIC2a/3 heteromeric channels. This was supported by studies in ASIC-null mice: acid-evoked currents from ASIC3(-/-) cardiac afferents matched the properties of ASIC2a channels, and currents from ASIC2(-/-) cardiac afferents matched the properties of ASIC3 channels. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that ASIC2a and -3 are the major ASIC subunits in cardiac dorsal root ganglia neurons and provide potential molecular targets to attenuate chest pain and deleterious reflexes associated with cardiac disease.
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