Mechanisms of sensory transduction in the skin

Sensory neurons innervating the skin encode the familiar sensations of temperature, touch and pain. An explosion of progress has revealed unanticipated cellular and molecular complexity in these senses. It is now clear that perception of a single stimulus, such as heat, requires several transduction...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2007-02, Vol.445 (7130), p.858-865
Hauptverfasser: Lumpkin, Ellen A., Caterina, Michael J.
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Caterina, Michael J.
description Sensory neurons innervating the skin encode the familiar sensations of temperature, touch and pain. An explosion of progress has revealed unanticipated cellular and molecular complexity in these senses. It is now clear that perception of a single stimulus, such as heat, requires several transduction mechanisms. Conversely, a given protein may contribute to multiple senses, such as heat and touch. Recent studies have also led to the surprising insight that skin cells might transduce temperature and touch. To break the code underlying somatosensation, we must therefore understand how the skin's sensory functions are divided among signalling molecules and cell types.
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subjects Animals
Cellular biology
Epidermis - cytology
Epidermis - metabolism
Humanities and Social Sciences
Ion Channels - metabolism
Mechanotransduction, Cellular - physiology
Molecular biology
multidisciplinary
Neurons
Pain
review-article
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Sensory Receptor Cells - metabolism
Signal transduction
Skin
Skin - cytology
Skin - innervation
Skin - metabolism
Temperature
title Mechanisms of sensory transduction in the skin
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