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Activation of pruritogenic TGR5, MrgprA3, and MrgprC11 on colon-innervating afferents induces visceral hypersensitivity

Authors :
Joel Castro
Paul Miller
Tracey A. O'Donnell
Lin Chang
Xinzhong Dong
Daniel P. Poole
Gudrun Schober
Nigel W. Bunnett
Andrea Ghetti
Jessica Maddern
Andrea M. Harrington
Stuart M. Brierley
Amanda L. Lumsden
Tina Marie Lieu
Sonia Garcia-Caraballo
Luke Grundy
Martin Steinhoff
Castro, Joel
Harrington, Andrea M
Lieu, TinaMarie
Garcia-Caraballo, Sonia
Maddern, Jessica
Schober, Gudrun
O'Donnell, Tracey
Grundy, Luke
Lumsden, Amanda L
Miller, Paul
Ghetti, Andre
Steinhoff, Martin S
Poole, Daniel P
Dong, Xinzhong
Chang, Lin
Bunnett, Nigel W
Brierley, Stuart M
Source :
JCI Insight
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2019.

Abstract

Itch induces scratching that removes irritants from the skin, whereas pain initiates withdrawal or avoidance of tissue damage. While pain arises from both the skin and viscera, we investigated whether pruritogenic irritant mechanisms also function within visceral pathways. We show that subsets of colon-innervating sensory neurons in mice express, either individually or in combination, the pruritogenic receptors Tgr5 and the Mas-gene–related GPCRs Mrgpra3 and Mrgprc11. Agonists of these receptors activated subsets of colonic sensory neurons and evoked colonic afferent mechanical hypersensitivity via a TRPA1-dependent mechanism. In vivo intracolonic administration of individual TGR5, MrgprA3, or MrgprC11 agonists induced pronounced visceral hypersensitivity to colorectal distension. Coadministration of these agonists as an “itch cocktail” augmented hypersensitivity to colorectal distension and changed mouse behavior. These irritant mechanisms were maintained and enhanced in a model of chronic visceral hypersensitivity relevant to irritable bowel syndrome. Neurons from human dorsal root ganglia also expressed TGR5, as well as the human ortholog MrgprX1, and showed increased responsiveness to pruritogenic agonists in pathological states. These data support the existence of an irritant-sensing system in the colon that is a visceral representation of the itch pathways found in skin, thereby contributing to sensory disturbances accompanying common intestinal disorders.<br />TGR5, MrgprA3, and MrgprC11, receptors normally associated with pruritis, are expressed by colonic afferents and, when activated, induce visceral hypersensitivity relevant to irritable bowel syndrome.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23793708
Volume :
4
Issue :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JCI Insight
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....34ff7c99b9c101b937e2d2572158b757