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Dive into the research topics where Joel Castro is active.

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Featured researches published by Joel Castro.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2001

Necrotic volume increase and the early physiology of necrosis

Luis Felipe Barros; Tamara Hermosilla; Joel Castro

Whether a lethally injured mammalian cell undergoes necrosis or apoptosis may be determined by the early activation of specific ion channels at the cell surface. Apoptosis requires K+ and Cl- efflux, which leads to cell shrinking, an active phenomenon termed apoptotic volume decrease (AVD). In contrast, necrosis has been shown to require Na+ influx through membrane carriers and more recently through stress-activated non-selective cation channels (NSCCs). These ubiquitous channels are kept dormant in viable cells but become activated upon exposure to free-radicals. The ensuing Na+ influx leads to cell swelling, an active response that may be termed necrotic volume increase (NVI). This review focuses on how AVD and NVI become conflicting forces at the beginning of cell injury, on the events that determine irreversibility and in particular, on the ion fluxes that decide whether a cell is to die by necrosis or by apoptosis.


Gut | 2013

Sensory neuro-immune interactions differ between Irritable Bowel Syndrome subtypes

Patrick A. Hughes; Andrea M. Harrington; Joel Castro; Tobias Liebregts; Birgit Adam; Dallas J Grasby; Nicole J. Isaacs; Lochana Maldeniya; Christopher M. Martin; Jenny Persson; Jane M. Andrews; Gerald Holtmann; L. Ashley Blackshaw; Stuart M. Brierley

Objective The gut is a major site of contact between immune and sensory systems and evidence suggests that patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) have immune dysfunction. Here we show how this dysfunction differs between major IBS subgroups and how immunocytes communicate with sensory nerves. Design Peripheral blood mononuclear cell supernatants from 20 diarrhoea predominant IBS (D-IBS) patients, 15 constipation predominant IBS (C-IBS) patients and 36 healthy subjects were applied to mouse colonic sensory nerves and effects on mechanosensitivity assessed. Cytokine/chemokine concentration in the supernatants was assessed by proteomic analysis and correlated with abdominal symptoms, and expression of cytokine receptors evaluated in colonic dorsal root ganglia neurons. We then determined the effects of specific cytokines on colonic afferents. Results D-IBS supernatants caused mechanical hypersensitivity of mouse colonic afferent endings, which was reduced by infliximab. C-IBS supernatants did not, but occasionally elevated basal discharge. Supernatants of healthy subjects inhibited afferent mechanosensitivity via an opioidergic mechanism. Several cytokines were elevated in IBS supernatants, and levels correlated with pain frequency and intensity in patients. Visceral afferents expressed receptors for four cytokines: IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10 and TNF-α. TNF-α most effectively caused mechanical hypersensitivity which was blocked by a transient receptor potential channel TRPA1 antagonist. IL-1β elevated basal firing, and this was lost after tetrodotoxin blockade of sodium channels. Conclusions Distinct patterns of immune dysfunction and interaction with sensory pathways occur in different patient groups and through different intracellular pathways. Our results indicate IBS patient subgroups would benefit from selective targeting of the immune system.


Pain | 2011

A novel role for TRPM8 in visceral afferent function

Andrea M. Harrington; Patrick A. Hughes; Christopher M. Martin; Jing Yang; Joel Castro; Nicole J. Isaacs; L. Ashley Blackshaw; Stuart M. Brierley

&NA; Transient receptor potential ion channel melastatin subtype 8 (TRPM8) is activated by cold temperatures and cooling agents, such as menthol and icilin. Compounds containing peppermint are reported to reduce symptoms of bowel hypersensitivity; however, the underlying mechanisms of action are unclear. Here we determined the role of TRPM8 in colonic sensory pathways. Laser capture microdissection, quantitative reverse transcription‐polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR), immunofluorescence, and retrograde tracing were used to localise TRPM8 to colonic primary afferent neurons. In vitro extracellular single‐fibre afferent recordings were used to determine the effect of TRPM8 channel activation on the chemosensory and mechanosensory function of colonic high‐threshold afferent fibres. TRPM8 mRNA was present in colonic DRG neurons, whereas TRPM8 protein was present on nerve fibres throughout the wall of the colon. A subpopulation (24%, n = 58) of splanchnic serosal and mesenteric afferents tested responded directly to icilin (5 μmol/L). Subsequently, icilin significantly desensitised afferents to mechanical stimulation (P < .0001; n = 37). Of the splanchnic afferents responding to icilin, 21 (33%) also responded directly to the TRPV1 agonist capsaicin (3 μmol/L), and icilin reduced the direct chemosensory response to capsaicin. Icilin also prevented mechanosensory desensitization and sensitization induced by capsaicin and the TRPA1 agonist AITC (40 μmol/L), respectively. TRPM8 is present on a select population of colonic high threshold sensory neurons, which may also co‐express TRPV1. TRPM8 couples to TRPV1 and TRPA1 to inhibit their downstream chemosensory and mechanosensory actions. TRPM8 was localised to high‐threshold visceral afferent neurons. On visceral afferent peripheral endings, TRPM8 activation affected TRPV1 and TRPA1 downstream chemosensory and mechanosensory actions.


The Journal of Physiology | 2011

TRPA1 contributes to specific mechanically activated currents and sensory neuron mechanical hypersensitivity

Stuart M. Brierley; Joel Castro; Andrea M. Harrington; Patrick A. Hughes; Amanda J. Page; Grigori Y. Rychkov; L. Ashley Blackshaw

Non‐technical summary  Detecting mechanical stimuli is vital to determining our responses to environmental challenges. The speed required for this process suggests ion channels are opened in response to mechanical forces. A specialised membrane protein called the TRPA1 ion channel mediates chemical based pain; however its role in mechanical pain remains unresolved. Here we show that TRPA1 contributes to the detection of mechanical stimuli in a select set of pain sensing neurons. Furthermore, we also show that acute activation of this channel enhances the mechanical responsiveness of these neurons. Finally, we also show that increasing the expression of TRPA1 causes a further enhancement in the mechanical response. These findings suggest that a drug designed to block TRPA1 would be beneficial for the treatment of numerous pathological conditions associated with mechanical pain.


Nature | 2016

Selective spider toxins reveal a role for the Nav1.1 channel in mechanical pain

Jeremiah D. Osteen; Volker Herzig; John Gilchrist; Joshua J. Emrick; Chuchu Zhang; Xidao Wang; Joel Castro; Sonia Garcia-Caraballo; Luke Grundy; Grigori Y. Rychkov; Andy Weyer; Zoltan Dekan; Eivind A. B. Undheim; Paul F. Alewood; Cheryl L. Stucky; Stuart M. Brierley; Allan I. Basbaum; Frank Bosmans; Glenn F. King; David Julius

Voltage-gated sodium (Nav) channels initiate action potentials in most neurons, including primary afferent nerve fibres of the pain pathway. Local anaesthetics block pain through non-specific actions at all Nav channels, but the discovery of selective modulators would facilitate the analysis of individual subtypes of these channels and their contributions to chemical, mechanical, or thermal pain. Here we identify and characterize spider (Heteroscodra maculata) toxins that selectively activate the Nav1.1 subtype, the role of which in nociception and pain has not been elucidated. We use these probes to show that Nav1.1-expressing fibres are modality-specific nociceptors: their activation elicits robust pain behaviours without neurogenic inflammation and produces profound hypersensitivity to mechanical, but not thermal, stimuli. In the gut, high-threshold mechanosensitive fibres also express Nav1.1 and show enhanced toxin sensitivity in a mouse model of irritable bowel syndrome. Together, these findings establish an unexpected role for Nav1.1 channels in regulating the excitability of sensory nerve fibres that mediate mechanical pain.


Cell | 2017

Enterochromaffin Cells Are Gut Chemosensors that Couple to Sensory Neural Pathways

Nicholas W. Bellono; James R. Bayrer; Duncan B. Leitch; Joel Castro; Chuchu Zhang; Tracey A. O’Donnell; Stuart M. Brierley; Holly A. Ingraham; David Julius

Dietary, microbial, and inflammatory factors modulate the gut-brain axis and influence physiological processes ranging from metabolism to cognition. The gut epithelium is a principal site for detecting such agents, but precisely how it communicates with neural elements is poorly understood. Serotonergic enterochromaffin (EC) cells are proposed to fulfill this role by acting as chemosensors, but understanding how these rare and unique cell types transduce chemosensory information to the nervous system has been hampered by their paucity and inaccessibility to single-cell measurements. Here, we circumvent this limitation by exploiting cultured intestinal organoids together with single-cell measurements to elucidate intrinsic biophysical, pharmacological, and genetic properties of EC cells. We show that EC cells express specific chemosensory receptors, are electrically excitable, and modulate serotonin-sensitive primary afferent nerve fibers via synaptic connections, enabling them to detect and transduce environmental, metabolic, and homeostatic information from the gut directly to the nervous system.


Nature Communications | 2014

Selenoether oxytocin analogues have analgesic properties in a mouse model of chronic abdominal pain

Aline Dantas de Araujo; Mehdi Mobli; Joel Castro; Andrea M. Harrington; Irina Vetter; Zoltan Dekan; Markus Muttenthaler; Jingjing Wan; Richard J. Lewis; Glenn F. King; Stuart M. Brierley; Paul F. Alewood

Poor oral availability and susceptibility to reduction and protease degradation is a major hurdle in peptide drug development. However, drugable receptors in the gut present an attractive niche for peptide therapeutics. Here we demonstrate, in a mouse model of chronic abdominal pain, that oxytocin receptors are significantly upregulated in nociceptors innervating the colon. Correspondingly, we develop chemical strategies to engineer non-reducible and therefore more stable oxytocin analogues. Chemoselective selenide macrocyclization yields stabilized analogues equipotent to native oxytocin. Ultra-high-field nuclear magnetic resonance structural analysis of native oxytocin and the seleno-oxytocin derivatives reveals that oxytocin has a pre-organized structure in solution, in marked contrast to earlier X-ray crystallography studies. Finally, we show that these seleno-oxytocin analogues potently inhibit colonic nociceptors both in vitro and in vivo in mice with chronic visceral hypersensitivity. Our findings have potentially important implications for clinical use of oxytocin analogues and disulphide-rich peptides in general.


Biochemical Journal | 2007

Phospholipase C-γ1 is required for the activation of store-operated Ca2+ channels in liver cells

Tom Litjens; Than Nguyen; Joel Castro; Edoardo Aromataris; Lynette Jones; Greg J. Barritt; Grigori Y. Rychkov

Repetitive hormone-induced changes in concentration of free cytoplasmic Ca2+ in hepatocytes require Ca2+ entry through receptor-activated Ca2+ channels and SOCs (store-operated Ca2+ channels). SOCs are activated by a decrease in Ca2+ concentration in the intracellular Ca2+ stores, but the molecular components and mechanisms are not well understood. Some studies with other cell types suggest that PLC-gamma (phospholipase C-gamma) is involved in the activation of receptor-activated Ca2+ channels and/or SOCs, independently of PLC-gamma-mediated generation of IP3 (inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate). The nature of the Ca2+ channels regulated by PLC-gamma has not been defined clearly. The aim of the present study was to determine if PLC-gamma is required for the activation of SOCs in liver cells. Transfection of H4IIE cells derived from rat hepatocytes with siRNA (short interfering RNA) targeted to PLC-gamma1 caused a reduction (by approx. 70%) in the PLC-gamma1 protein expression, with maximal effect at 72-96 h. This was associated with a decrease (by approx. 60%) in the amplitude of the I(SOC) (store-operated Ca2+ current) developed in response to intracellular perfusion with either IP(3) or thapsigargin. Knockdown of STIM1 (stromal interaction molecule type 1) by siRNA also resulted in a significant reduction (approx. 80% at 72 h post-transfection) of the I(SOC) amplitude. Immunoprecipitation of PLC-gamma1 and STIM1, however, suggested that under the experimental conditions these proteins do not interact with each other. It is concluded that the PLC-gamma1 protein, independently of IP3 generation and STIM1, is required to couple endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release to the activation of SOCs in the plasma membrane of H4IIE liver cells.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2012

Sprouting of colonic afferent central terminals and increased spinal mitogen-activated protein kinase expression in a mouse model of chronic visceral hypersensitivity.

Andrea M. Harrington; Stuart M. Brierley; Nicole J. Isaacs; Patrick A. Hughes; Joel Castro; L. Ashley Blackshaw

Visceral pain following infection or inflammation is a major clinical problem. Although we have knowledge of how peripheral endings of colonic afferents change in disease, their central projections have been overlooked. With neuroanatomical tracing and colorectal distension (CRD), we sought to identify colonic afferent central terminals (CACTs), the dorsal horn (DH) neurons activated by colonic stimuli in the thoracolumbar (T10–L1) DH, and determine how they are altered by postinflammatory chronic colonic mechanical hypersensitivity. Retrograde tracing from the colon identified CACTs in the DH, whereas immunohistochemistry for phosphorylated MAP kinase ERK 1/2 (pERK) identified DH neurons activated by CRD (80 mmHg). In healthy mice, CACTs were located primarily in DH laminae I (LI) and V (LV) and projected down middle and lateral DH collateral pathways. CRD evoked pERK immunoreactivity in DH neurons, the majority of which were located in LI and LV, the same regions as CACTs. In postinflammatory mice, CACTs were significantly increased in T12–L1 compared with healthy mice. Although CACTs remained abundant in LI, they were more widespread and were now present in deeper laminae. After CRD, significantly more DH neurons were pERK‐IR postinflammation (T12–L1), with abundant expression in LI and deeper laminae. In both healthy and postinflammatory mice, many pERK neurons were in close apposition to CACTs, suggesting that colonic afferents can stimulate specific DH neurons in response to noxious CRD. Overall, we demonstrate that CACT density and the number of responsive DH neurons in the spinal cord increase postinflammation, which may facilitate aberrant central representation of colonic nociceptive signaling following chronic peripheral hypersensitivity. J. Comp. Neurol. 520:2241–2255, 2012.


Gut | 2014

Increased κ-opioid receptor expression and function during chronic visceral hypersensitivity

Patrick A. Hughes; Joel Castro; Andrea M. Harrington; Nicole J. Isaacs; Melissa Moretta; Gareth A. Hicks; David M. Urso; Stuart M. Brierley

In a recent article in Gut , Hughes et al 1 identified distinct patterns of immune dysfunction in IBS patients compared with healthy subjects. In particular, they showed that peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) supernatants from healthy subjects inhibited colonic afferents in a μ-opioid receptor (MOR)-mediated manner. These findings correlated with β-endorphin from T lymphocytes providing an important MOR-mediated antinociceptive influence in the healthy gut.2 Intriguingly, these inhibitory effects were lost with PBMC supernatants from constipation-predominant IBS patients suggesting a loss of MOR-mediated inhibition, coupled with increased excitatory mediators (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6), contributes to abdominal pain.1 We evaluated if this alteration was MOR specific or whether it extended to other members of the opioid receptor family. As clinical studies have shown varying outcomes on visceral pain perception with κ-opioid receptor (KOR) agonists,3–5 we postulated KOR expression and function are altered during visceral hypersensitivity. Therefore, we determined if the peripherally restricted selective KOR agonist, asimadoline, was able to modify colonic nociceptor function in health and during inflammatory and postinflammatory chronic visceral mechanical hypersensitivity (CVH).6 We performed in vitro afferent recordings from mouse splanchnic high-threshold nociceptors, which respond to focal compression and noxious stretch/distension.1 ,6 …

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Luke Grundy

University of Adelaide

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L. Ashley Blackshaw

Queen Mary University of London

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