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First published online on July 4, 2003.
Copyright © 2003 by The Physiological Society
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Received April 29, 2003
Revised May 27, 2003
Accepted after revision July 3, 2003

Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) potentiates native ionotropic ATP receptors containing the P2X2 subunit in rat sensory neurones

Mathias De Roo1, Jean-Luc Rodeau1, and Rémy Schlichter1*

1 Université Louis Pasteur

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: schlichter{at}neurochem.u-strasbg.fr.

We have studied the modulatory effect of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), the most abundant neurosteroid produced by glial cells and neurones, on membrane currents induced by the activation of ionotropic ATP (P2X) receptors in neonatal rat dorsal root ganglion neurones. ATP (1 µM) induced three types of currents/responses termed F (fast and transient), S (slowly desensitizing) and M (mixed, sum of F- and S-type responses). DHEA (10 nM - 100 µM) dose-dependently increased the amplitude of plateau- like currents of S- and M-type responses evoked by submaximal (1 µM) but not saturating (100 µ M or 1 mM) concentrations of ATP. {alpha}{beta}- methylene ATP ({alpha}{beta}me-ATP, 5 µM) also evoked F-, S- and M-type responses, the plateau phases of which were potentiated by lowering external pH (6.3) and by ivermectin (IVM, 3 µM), indicating the presence heteromeric P2X2-containing receptors and possibly of functional native P2X4/6 receptors. There was a strict correlation between the potentiating effects of low pH and DHEA on {alpha}{beta}me-ATP responses but not between that of IVM and DHEA, suggesting that DHEA selectively modulated P2X2-containing receptors. DHEA also potentiated putative homomeric P2X2 receptor responses recorded in the continuous presence of 1 µM TNP-ATP. Our results constitute the first demonstration of a fast potentiation of P2X receptors by a neurosteroid and suggest that DHEA could be an endogenous modulator of P2X2-containing receptors thereby contributing to the facilitation of the detection and/or the transmission of nociceptive messages, particularly under conditions of inflammatory pain where the P2X receptor signalling pathway appears to be upregulated.


Key words: ATP receptor • Dorsal root ganglion • Modulation




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