Selective Sensory Axon Reinnervation and TRPV1 Activation

2019 
Current strategies to enhance regeneration of peripheral neurons involve broad activation of sensory, autonomic, and motor axons. Peripheral neuron regeneration is limited in persons with damage or disease of peripheral axons. Here, we provide evidence that subtoxic activation of TRPV1 channels in sensory neurons is associated with activation of growth and subtle changes in skin reinnervation. We identify a bidirectional, dose-related impact of capsaicin, a TRPV1 agonist, on sensory neurons and their axons with rises in their outgrowth plasticity at low doses and toxic neurodegeneration at high doses. Moreover, its impact on growth added to that of preconditioning. Neither outcome was observed in TRPV1 null neurons. We confirmed that low dose activation was associated with rises in neuronal calcium, as well as rises in TRPV1 mRNA transcripts. In mice with a sciatic nerve crush followed by a single application of capsaicin directly to the injury site, there was no impact on motor or myelinated axon recovery but there was evidence of better recovery of thermal sensation toward baseline with hyperalgesia. Moreover, skin reinnervation by epidermal axons approached contralateral levels. TRPV1 null mice displayed loss of thermal sensation during later recovery. In sensory axons innervating the pinna of the ear, local capsaicin rendered early axon loss followed by later hyperinnervation. Taken together, TRPV1 activation alters the regenerative behavior of adult neurons and their axons both in vitro and during epidermal reinnervation in vivo. The findings identify a selective manipulation that augments cutaneous innervation by thermosensitive axons.
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