TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
7Total items
4ePosters
3Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

PIEZO2 in somatosensory neurons coordinates gastrointestinal transit

Rocio Servin-Vences
The Scripps Research Institute
Mar 1, 2023

The transit of food through the gastrointestinal tract is critical for nutrient absorption and survival, and the gastrointestinal tract has the ability to initiate motility reflexes triggered by luminal distention. This complex function depends on the crosstalk between extrinsic and intrinsic neuronal innervation within the intestine, as well as local specialized enteroendocrine cells. However, the molecular mechanisms and the subset of sensory neurons underlying the initiation and regulation of intestinal motility remain largely unknown. Here, we show that humans lacking PIEZO2 exhibit impaired bowel sensation and motility. Piezo2 in mouse dorsal root but not nodose ganglia is required to sense gut content, and this activity slows down food transit rates in the stomach, small intestine, and colon. Indeed, Piezo2 is directly required to detect colon distension in vivo. Our study unveils the mechanosensory mechanisms that regulate the transit of luminal contents throughout the gut, which is a critical process to ensure proper digestion, nutrient absorption, and waste removal. These findings set the foundation of future work to identify the highly regulated interactions between sensory neurons, enteric neurons and non- neuronal cells that control gastrointestinal motility.

SeminarNeuroscience

Under Pressure: the role of PIEZO ion channels in interoception

Kara Marshall
Scripps Research
Mar 1, 2021

PIEZO ion channels detect force in cellular membranes. They are expressed in a wide variety of mammalian tissues, including the vasculature, lymphatic system, and the nervous system. We have found that PIEZO2 in sensory neurons is required for the mechanical senses of touch and proprioception, but our understanding of internal organ sensing, interoception, is far behind. I will describe our findings on the role of PIEZO ion channels in the lesser-known interoceptive senses in multiple organ systems.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Vagal sensory neurons that guard the airways

Stephen Liberles
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
Jun 22, 2020

The vagus nerve contains a diversity of sensory neurons that detect peripheral stimuli such as blood pressure changes at the aortic arch, lung expansion during breathing, meal-induced stomach distension, and chemotherapeutics that induce nausea. Underlying vagal sensory mechanisms are largely unresolved at a molecular level, presenting tremendously important problems in sensory biology. We charted vagal sensory neurons by single cell RNA sequencing, identifying novel cell surface receptors and classifying a staggering diversity of sensory neuron types. We then generated a collection of ires-Cre knock-in mice to target each neuron type, and adapted genetic tools for Cre-based anatomical mapping, in vivo imaging, targeted ablation, and optogenetic control of vagal neuron activity. We found different sensory neuron types that innervate the lung and exert powerful effects on breathing, others that monitor and control the digestive system, and yet others that innervate that innervate the larynx and protect the airways. Together with Ardem Patapoutian, we also identified a critical role for Piezo mechanoreceptors in the sensation of airway stretch, which underlies a classical respiratory reflex termed the Hering-Breuer inspiratory reflex, as well as in the neuronal sensation of blood pressure and the baroreceptor reflex.

ePosterNeuroscience

Microfluidic chips in a comparative study of mechanosensitive Piezo1 receptors in trigeminal versus dorsal root ganglia neurons

Nikita Mikhailov, Lidiia Plotnikova, Prateek Singh, Rashid Giniatullin, Riikka H. Hämäläinen
ePosterNeuroscience

Mechanosensitivity of urinary bladder smooth muscles: the role of TREK-1/TRPV4/Piezo1 channels

Semen I. Yeliashov, Bizhan R. Sharopov, Anastasia O. Danshina, Yaroslav M. Shuba
ePosterNeuroscience

Piezo2 lineages in the developing central nervous system

Mireia Pàmpols Pérez, Carina Fürst, Gary R. Lewin, Annette Hammes-Lewin
ePosterNeuroscience

PIEZO1 channel mediates inflammatory pain in mice

Pa-Reum Lee, Taewoong Ha, Gyu-Sang Hong

FENS Forum 2024

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