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Publications [#267535] of Craig D Roberts

Peer-reviewed journal articles accepted

  1. Roberts, CD; Dvoryanchikov, G; Roper, SD; Chaudhari, N, Interaction between the second messengers cAMP and Ca2+ in mouse presynaptic taste cells, The Journal of Physiology, vol. 587 no. 8 (2009), pp. 1657-1668, ISSN 0022-3751 [doi]
    (last updated on 2017/06/07)

    Abstract:
    The second messenger, 3′,5′-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), is known to be modulated in taste buds following exposure to gustatory and other stimuli. Which taste cell type(s) (Type I/glial-like cells, Type II/receptor cells, or Type III/presynaptic cells) undergo taste-evoked changes of cAMP and what the functional consequences of such changes are remain unknown. Using Fura-2 imaging of isolated mouse vallate taste cells, we explored how elevating cAMP alters Ca2+ levels in identified taste cells. Stimulating taste buds with forskolin (Fsk; 1 μm) + isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX; 100 μm), which elevates cellular cAMP, triggered Ca2+ transients in 38% of presynaptic cells (n = 128). We used transgenic GAD-GFP mice to show that cAMP-triggered Ca2+ responses occur only in the subset of presynaptic cells that lack glutamic acid decarboxylase 67 (GAD). We never observed cAMP-stimulated responses in receptor cells, glial-like cells or GAD-expressing presynaptic cells. The response to cAMP was blocked by the protein kinase A inhibitor H89 and by removing extracellular Ca2+. Thus, the response to elevated cAMP is a PKA-dependent influx of Ca2+. This Ca2+ influx was blocked by nifedipine (an inhibitor of L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channels) but was unperturbed by ω-agatoxin IVA and ω-conotoxin GVIA (P/Q-type and N-type channel inhibitors, respectively). Single-cell RT-PCR on functionally identified presynaptic cells from GAD-GFP mice confirmed the pharmacological analyses: Cav1.2 (an L-type subunit) is expressed in cells that display cAMP-triggered Ca2+ influx, while Cav2.1 (a P/Q subunit) is expressed in all presynaptic cells, and underlies depolarization-triggered Ca2+ influx. Collectively, these data demonstrate cross-talk between cAMP and Ca2+ signalling in a subclass of taste cells that form synapses with gustatory fibres and may integrate tastant-evoked signals. © 2009 The Author. Journal compilation © 2009 The Physiological Society.


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