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Publication : Role of metabolic activation and the TRPA1 receptor in the sensory irritation response to styrene and naphthalene.

First Author  Lanosa MJ Year  2010
Journal  Toxicol Sci Volume  115
Issue  2 Pages  589-95
PubMed ID  20176620 Mgi Jnum  J:162969
Mgi Id  MGI:4820695 Doi  10.1093/toxsci/kfq057
Citation  Lanosa MJ, et al. (2010) Role of metabolic activation and the TRPA1 receptor in the sensory irritation response to styrene and naphthalene. Toxicol Sci 115(2):589-95
abstractText  The current study was aimed at examining the role of cytochrome P450 (CYP450) activation and the electrophile-sensitive transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 receptor (TRPA1) in mediating the sensory irritation response to styrene and naphthalene. Toward this end, the sensory irritation to these vapors was measured in female C57Bl/6J mice during 15-min exposure via plethysmographic measurement of the duration of braking at the onset of each expiration. The sensory irritation response to 75 ppm styrene and 7 ppm naphthalene was diminished threefold or more in animals pretreated with the CYP450 inhibitor metyrapone, providing evidence of the role of metabolic activation in the response to these vapors. The sensory irritation response to styrene (75 ppm) and naphthalene (7.6 ppm) was virtually absent in TRPA1-/- knockout mice, indicating the critical role of this receptor in mediating the response. Thus, these results support the hypothesis that styrene and naphthalene vapors initiate the sensory irritation response through TRPA1 detection of their CYP450 metabolites.
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