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Mechanotransduction channels in proprioceptive sensory nerve terminals: still an open question?

Authors :
Guy S. Bewick
Robert W. Banks
Source :
Current Opinion in Physiology, 2021, Vol.20, pp.90-104 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

Mechanosensory transduction (MST) in proprioceptors, and other low threshold mechanosensory nerve terminals (LTMT), has been debated intensely for decades. MST in muscle spindles produces a receptor potential that encodes stimulus speed and duration, is predominantly due to Na+, a little Ca2+, plus some transient, non-mechanically-gated K+ ion fluxes. The abundant, multiple Na+-selective DEG/ENaC channel isoforms present in all LTMTs seemed obvious Na+ sources, perhaps supplemented with Ca2+-selective TRPs, and Ca2+-activated K+ channels. However, genetic deletions of even multiple DEG/ENaC genes produces only mild functional perturbation. Conversely, deleting the more recently discovered Piezo2 mechanosensory protein profoundly impairs LTMT responses, including in muscle spindles. Yet its transient opening, non-Na+-selectivity and its pharmacology do not reflect known receptor potential and response properties. A Ca2+-dependent recycling vesicle pool that we have shown is essential for mechanosensitivity, plus other recent DEG/ENaC discoveries, may reconcile these conflicting observations. We propose the abundance of axolemmal MST complexes, comprising untested DEG/ENaC combinations, is controlled by Piezo2-gated Ca2+ influx that regulates their vesicular insertion and retrieval.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Opinion in Physiology, 2021, Vol.20, pp.90-104 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2be44fed80c19415a14000643c6c7fb7