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Publication : Divergent sensory pathways of sneezing and coughing.

First Author  Jiang H Year  2024
Journal  Cell Volume  187
Issue  21 Pages  5981-5997.e14
PubMed ID  39243765 Mgi Jnum  J:359444
Mgi Id  MGI:7764576 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2024.08.009
Citation  Jiang H, et al. (2024) Divergent sensory pathways of sneezing and coughing. Cell 187(21):5981-5997.e14
abstractText  Sneezing and coughing are primary symptoms of many respiratory viral infections and allergies. It is generally assumed that sneezing and coughing involve common sensory receptors and molecular neurotransmission mechanisms. Here, we show that the nasal mucosa is innervated by several discrete populations of sensory neurons, but only one population (MrgprC11(+)MrgprA3(-)) mediates sneezing responses to a multitude of nasal irritants, allergens, and viruses. Although this population also innervates the trachea, it does not mediate coughing, as revealed by our newly established cough model. Instead, a distinct sensory population (somatostatin [SST(+)]) mediates coughing but not sneezing, unraveling an unforeseen sensory difference between sneezing and coughing. At the circuit level, sneeze and cough signals are transmitted and modulated by divergent neuropathways. Together, our study reveals the difference in sensory receptors and neurotransmission/modulation mechanisms between sneezing and coughing, offering neuronal drug targets for symptom management in respiratory viral infections and allergies.
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