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how chill pains us

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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 06-19-2007, 05:14 AM
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Lightbulb how chill pains us

How a chill pains us

Whether the pain comes from holding an ice cube for too long or staying out on a frigid winter day, the source is clear: it's the cold that hurts. Now researchers have found a protein responsible for provoking pain in response to extreme cold in mice.

The protein, called Nav1.8, was already known to play a role in detecting tissue damage, and was previously associated with inflammation and pain in response to damaged nerves. Now it looks like the same protein gets involved when the temperature plummets.

Physiologist Katharina Zimmermann at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany, and her colleagues found that mice lacking the protein became impervious to pain from cold. Normal mice placed on a plate chilled to 0°C will hop about and lift their feet, but mice engineered to lack Nav1.8 do not, they found.

The protein works by helping sodium ions to pass through the cell membrane of neurons, a process that is crucial to transmitting signals — including pain signals — along nerve fibres. It works unusually well in the cold; unlike other similar proteins, its activity doesn't decline as the temperature drops. "That goes against what cells are supposed to do in the cold.

Feeling the chill

The work adds to our increasing appreciation of how we sense temperature. A protein that responds to moderately cold temperatures (and the cool feel of menthol) was recently identified.

It's likely that Nav1.8 is involved in signalling other sensory experiences, such as heat or pressure, says neurobiologist David McKemy of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. But it's still unclear whether the protein directly responds to cold or is instead transmitting a signal from another receptor, Patapoutian adds.

Zimmermann notes that Nav1.8 is a member of a family of proteins that has been shared in similar form by a wide range of animals over time. The protein could be important, she speculates, for telling cold-blooded animals when it's time to seek out warmer locales.


References
1. Zimmerman K., et al. Nature, 447 . 855 - 858 (2007).
Best Regards
Aftab Ahmad
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  #2 (permalink)  
Old 06-19-2007, 02:31 PM
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Default Re: how chill pains us

Wow,
very interesting post Aftab!

Maybe this will somehow be useful in the future... but I am sure nature has a use for us (to prevent tissue damage)

I could use a knockout of this gene from my genome here in Canada! lol
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Old 06-22-2007, 03:10 PM
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Default Re: how chill pains us

kkkkkkkkkkkkkk

that is funny
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Old 06-26-2007, 03:33 AM
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Default Re: how chill pains us

Thats interesting! Knockout of the gene may be helpful but it may be possible that the gene is related to any other function also. Lets see...
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Old 08-01-2007, 01:13 AM
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Default Re: how chill pains us

how's it funny ?
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