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Showing papers by "Peter W. Reeh published in 2006"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that TREK‐1 qualifies as one of the molecular sensors involved in pain perception and as an attractive target for the development of new analgesics.
Abstract: The TREK-1 channel is a temperature-sensitive, osmosensitive and mechano-gated K+ channel with a regulation by Gs and Gq coupled receptors. This paper demonstrates that TREK-1 qualifies as one of the molecular sensors involved in pain perception. TREK-1 is highly expressed in small sensory neurons, is present in both peptidergic and nonpeptidergic neurons and is extensively colocalized with TRPV1, the capsaicin-activated nonselective ion channel. Mice with a disrupted TREK-1 gene are more sensitive to painful heat sensations near the threshold between anoxious warmth and painful heat. This phenotype is associated with the primary sensory neuron, as polymodal C-fibers were found to be more sensitive to heat in single fiber experiments. Knockout animals are more sensitive to low threshold mechanical stimuli and display an increased thermal and mechanical hyperalgesia in conditions of inflammation. They display a largely decreased pain response induced by osmotic changes particularly in prostaglandin E2-sensitized animals. TREK-1 appears as an important ion channel for polymodal pain perception and as an attractive target for the development of new analgesics.

377 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An improved technique for fast cooling and heating of solutions superfusing isolated cells under patch-clamp or calcium imaging conditions that meets the requirements for studying temperature dependency of all kinds of ion channels, in particular temperature-gated ion channels.

88 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that mouse heart immersion is more effective than coronary perfusion in measuring stimulated CGRP release from cardial afferents which are widely distributed in the epicardium but rare in deeper myocardial layers.

12 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2006-Peptides
TL;DR: A simple and reproducible model is evaluated for measuring stimulated CGRP release from the human right atrium in patients who underwent cardiopulmonary bypass surgery and to compare patients with and without known history of diabetes mellitus.

5 citations