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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: research + gene + sensation  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Women?s Migraines Multiply Heart Risk
WebMD - Jul 30, 2008
"This gene by itself does not appear to increase the risk for overall and for specific cardiovascular disease, but rather this research suggests a possible ...
Study finds snacking gene
Mirror.co.uk, UK - Jul 28, 2008
More than half of Brits carry the FTO, which caused a sensation when it was discovered last year. Adults with two copies of the gene are on average 3kg ...
New genetic map of mouse spine 'incredibly important' to scientists
USA Today - Jul 17, 2008
Displaying about 20000 active genes in the brain and spine, the two databases offer researchers their first look at normal gene activity in the spine and ...
Susceptibility to pain is affected by premature birth and also ...
News-Medical.net, Australia - Jul 14, 2008
We have found a pain-protective gene variant where one copy on a chromosome provides about 25% of people with a reduced risk of developing pain, ...
Lexicon Pharmaceuticals' Drug Candidate for Irritable Bowel ...
MarketWatch - Jul 29, 2008
Serotonin is a key regulator of gastrointestinal sensation and motility. Importantly, the study showed that LX1031 decreased urinary 5-hydroxyindoleacetic ...LXRX
Winged pair to take big plunge
ABC Online, Australia - Jul 20, 2008
"There's some research now that points to the fact that high sensation seekers, the exploreres of the world, they've probably got a genetic trait. ...
All our family are deaf ... but a ?70000 operation will make our ...
Daily Mail, UK - Jul 12, 2008
The implants - electronic devices fitted inside the skull connecting the ears and brain - provide the sensation of hearing by stimulating the auditory nerve ...
Source: Google News

Homozygosity at the dopamine D 3 receptor gene is associated with opiate dependence -
E Duaux, P Gorwood, N Griffon, MC Bourdel, F … - Molecular Psychiatry, 1998 - nature.com
... Original research article. ... size, these results suggest that the DRD3 gene may have ...
dependence susceptibility in individuals with high sensation-seeking scores. ...

Association Between Dopamine Receptor D1 Gene Dde I polymorphism and Sensation Seeking in Alcohol- … -
F Limosin, JY Loze, F Rouillon, J Ad?s, P Gorwood - Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 2003 - alcoholism-cer.com
... Clinical & Experimental Research:Volume 27(8)August 2003pp 1226-1228. Association
Between Dopamine Receptor D1 Gene Dde I polymorphism and Sensation Seeking in ...

Relaxation and music to reduce postsurgical pain -
M Good, M Stanton-Hicks, JA Grass, GC Anderson, HL … - Journal of Advanced Nursing, 2001 - Blackwell Synergy
... Gene Cranston Anderson PhD RN FAAN 4 4 ... of Anaesthesia, Pain Management and Research,
The Cleveland ... 1 and 2 using visual analogue (VAS) sensation and distress ...

Relaxation and music reduce pain after gynecologic surgery -
M Good, GC Anderson, M Stanton-Hicks, JA Grass, M … - Pain Management Nursing, 2002 - Elsevier
... by the National Institute of Nursing Research, NIH, Grant ... Gene Cranston Anderson,
PhD, RN, FAAN, Michael Stanton-Hicks ... days 1 and 2. Pain sensation and distress ...

P3 Event-Related Potential, Dopamine D2 Receptor A1 Allele, and Sensation-Seeking in Adult Children … -
JE Ratsma, O van der Stelt, ANM Schoffelmeer, A … - Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 2001 - alcoholism-cer.com
... 1972) Diagnostic criteria for use in psychiatric research. ... The Dutch Version of
Zuckerman's Sensation-Seeking Scale ... the dopamine D2 receptor gene in alcoholism ...

… polymorphisms and measures of impulsivity, aggression, and sensation seeking among African-American … -
AA Patkar, WH Berrettini, M Hoehe, CC Thornton, E … - Psychiatry Research, 2002 - Elsevier
... Consistent with the research literature (Moeller and Yudofsky ... polymorphisms in the
5HTT gene and scores ... of impulsivity, aggression and sensation seeking among ...

The psychobiological model for impulsive unsocialized sensation seeking: A comparative approach -
M Zuckerman - Neuropsychobiology, 1996 - content.karger.com
... the recent advances in molecular genetic research may hold ... variant of the dopamine
receptor gene D4DR located ... 11 to the trait of novelty (sensation) seeking. ...

Intelligibility of Time-Compressed Sentential Stimuli -
DS Beasley, GW Bratt, WF Rintelmann - Journal of Speech, Language and Hearing Research, 1980 - ASHA
... GENE W. BRATT ... hearing young adults at time-cmnpression ratios of 0%, 40%, 60%, and
70%, under sensation levels of 24 ... 722 Journal of Speech and Hearing Research ...

Vanilloid receptor-1 is essential for inflammatory thermal hyperalgesia. -
JB Davis, J Gray, MJ Gunthorpe, JP Hatcher, PT … - Nature, 2000 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... These findings and research linking capsaicin with nociceptive ... being considered as
important for pain sensation. ... disrupted the mouse VR1 gene using standard ...

Chronic thalamic stimulation for the tremor of multiple sclerosis -
EB Montgomery, KB Baker, RP Kinkel, G Barnett - Neurology, 1999 - AAN Enterprises
... PhD , R. Philip Kinkel, MD and Gene Barnett, MD ... for Multiple Sclerosis Treatment
and Research (Dr. Kinkel ... and the reports of sensation with microstimulation ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Scripps research team sheds light on long-sought cold sensation gene

Discovery could lead to new treatments to ease pain

The discovery, reported in the May 3 issue of the journal Neuron, might one day lead to the development of drugs that induce cold sensation as an analgesic, or block it to prevent certain forms of chronic pain associated with cold sensation.

"This study represents the first demonstration that a single gene is responsible for most cool temperature sensation," says team leader Ardem Patapoutian, who has joint appointments with the Department of Cell Biology at Scripps Research and the Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation. "Many previous candidates have been postulated to play a role in our ability to sense cool temperatures, but none have withstood the test of genetics," he says.

TRPM8 was first discovered by Patapoutian’s group and proposed as a key gene controlling cold sensation. To test the hypothesis, the group observed the behavior of mice genetically altered to lack the gene in response to cold stimuli.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

When placed in compartments with a temperature gradient, or in an enclosure where they could choose between two temperatures, mice without TRPM8 showed essentially no preference in the temperature range of 18 to 31°C, suggesting their ability to sense this range was completely disabled without the gene. Normal mice, on the other hand, found cold temperature unpleasant, reliably avoiding cold temperatures in favor of warmer areas.

"It’s pretty amazing that one gene could impact thermal sensation this much," says Ajay Dhaka, a Scripps Research postdoctoral fellow in the Patapoutian lab and lead author on the Neuron paper. "It really highlights the importance of the peripheral nervous system and how temperature affects our behavior," he says.

The altered mice also showed little response to the application of acetone to their hindpaw, which causes an unpleasant cold sensation, while the acetone caused normal mice to flick their paw and lick them.

TRPM8 codes for an ion channel found at the tips of sensory neurons, which innervate the skin. When opened, ions flowing through TRPM8 lead to the activation of the sensory neuron, which in turn sends a signal to the brain. The Patapoutian team’s results support the idea that activation of TRPM8 by temperature triggers cold sensation. "TRPM8 acts as a gate," says Dhaka, "At warm temperature it remains closed, but opens when exposed to cool temperature."

The TRPM8-deficient mice did not lose their ability to feel pain in response to extreme cold, as evidenced by responses similar to wild type mice when exposed to -1° C cold plates. This suggests that other genes are responsible for this facet of cold sensation.

Though cold can be unpleasant or painful under certain circumstances, it can also deaden pain, as illustrated by icing an injury to relieve pain. To test this side of cold sensation, the researchers injected the mice with small amounts of a pain-causing chemical, formalin, and then exposed the affected paw area to a cold plate.

Cold temperature clearly reduced the acute pain felt by control mice as shown by a reduction in the response to formalin injection when compared to the amount of time control mice spent flicking and licking their paws when placed on a room temperature plate. In contrast, TRPM8-deficient mice did not receive any acute pain relief from the cold plate suggesting that cold activation of TRPM8 can mediate some of the analgesic effects of cold.

Just how the same sensation can be interpreted as unpleasant under certain circumstances and pleasant in others is still not clear, but is a question the group plans to investigate. "It would be really interesting to find out how the brain takes essentially the same signal and, depending on context, interprets it differently,” says Dhaka.

###

Other authors on the paper, entitled "TRPM8 Is Required for Cold Sensation in Mice," were Amber Murray and Taryn Earley, from Scripps Research, and Jayanti Mathur and Matt Petrus, from the Novartis Research Foundation.

About The Scripps Research Institute

The Scripps Research Institute is one of the world’s largest independent, non-profit biomedical research organizations, at the forefront of basic biomedical science that seeks to comprehend the most fundamental processes of life. Scripps Research is internationally recognized for its discoveries in immunology, molecular and cellular biology, chemistry, neurosciences, autoimmune, cardiovascular, and infectious diseases, and synthetic vaccine development. Established in its current configuration in 1961, it employs approximately 3,000 scientists, postdoctoral fellows, scientific and other technicians, doctoral degree graduate students, and administrative and technical support personnel. Scripps Research is headquartered in La Jolla, California. It also includes Scripps Florida, whose researchers focus on basic biomedical science, drug discovery, and technology development. Currently operating from temporary facilities in Jupiter, Scripps Florida will move to its permanent campus in 2009.

 
 
 
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