Functional morphology and physiological properties of bronchopulmonary C‐fiber afferents
Open Access
- 17 December 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in The Anatomical Record Part A: Discoveries in Molecular, Cellular, and Evolutionary Biology
- Vol. 270A (1) , 17-24
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.a.10005
Abstract
Nonmyelinated (C‐) fibers represent the majority of vagal afferents innervating the airways and lung, and play an important role in regulating the respiratory and cardiovascular functions under both normal and abnormal physiologic conditions. Studies of the relationship between the conduction velocities of the vagal afferents and their sensitivities to capsaicin and other chemical irritants reveal that C‐fibers are the primary type of chemosensitive afferents in the rat lung. Furthermore, a distinct sensitivity to capsaicin and a weak response to lung inflation are the defining characteristics of these afferents. In cultured rat nodose and jugular ganglion neurons, capsaicin‐sensitive cells were identified by measurement of the capsaicin‐evoked calcium transients using the Fura‐2‐based ratiometric imaging technique. The percentage of capsaicin‐sensitive neurons gradually decreases as the cell diameter increases. However, the capsaicin‐sensitive neurons cannot be precisely identified solely on the basis of the cell size. Anandamide, an endogenous cannabinoid released from leukocytes and epithelial cells, consistently evokes a stimulatory effect on pulmonary C‐fiber endings by activating vanilloid receptor type 1 (VR1). The discharge pattern of pulmonary C‐fibers evoked by anandamide closely resembles that produced by a much lower (∼1/600) dose of capsaicin in the same fibers. Whether anandamide acts as a potential endogenous ligand to VR1 at the C‐fiber terminals is unclear, and the physiological role of VR1 in modulating the transduction properties of these afferents also remains to be determined. Anat Rec Part A 270A:17–24, 2003.Keywords
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