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Featured researches published by Philip David Hayes.


Nature | 2002

TRPV3 is a temperature-sensitive vanilloid receptor-like protein

Graham D. Smith; Martin J. Gunthorpe; Rosemary E. Kelsell; Philip David Hayes; P. Reilly; Paul Facer; James Wright; Jeffrey C. Jerman; Jean-Philippe Walhin; Lezanne Ooi; Julie Egerton; K. J. Charles; Darren Smart; Andrew D. Randall; Praveen Anand; John B. Davis

Vanilloid receptor-1 (VR1, also known as TRPV1) is a thermosensitive, nonselective cation channel that is expressed by capsaicin-sensitive sensory afferents and is activated by noxious heat, acidic pH and the alkaloid irritant capsaicin. Although VR1 gene disruption results in a loss of capsaicin responses, it has minimal effects on thermal nociception. This and other experiments—such as those showing the existence of capsaicin-insensitive heat sensors in sensory neurons—suggest the existence of thermosensitive receptors distinct from VR1. Here we identify a member of the vanilloid receptor/TRP gene family, vanilloid receptor-like protein 3 (VRL3, also known as TRPV3), which is heat-sensitive but capsaicin-insensitive. VRL3 is coded for by a 2,370-base-pair open reading frame, transcribed from a gene adjacent to VR1, and is structurally homologous to VR1. VRL3 responds to noxious heat with a threshold of about 39 °C and is co-expressed in dorsal root ganglion neurons with VR1. Furthermore, when heterologously expressed, VRL3 is able to associate with VR1 and may modulate its responses. Hence, not only is VRL3 a thermosensitive ion channel but it may represent an additional vanilloid receptor subunit involved in the formation of heteromeric vanilloid receptor channels.


Pain | 2000

Cloning and functional expression of a human orthologue of rat vanilloid receptor-1

Philip David Hayes; Helen Jane Meadows; Martin J. Gunthorpe; Mark Harries; D.Malcolm Duckworth; William Cairns; David C. Harrison; Catherine E. Clarke; Kathryn Ellington; Rab K. Prinjha; Amanda Barton; Andrew D. Medhurst; Graham D. Smith; Simon Topp; Paul R. Murdock; Gareth J. Sanger; John Terrett; Owen Jenkins; Christopher D. Benham; Andrew D. Randall; Isro S Gloger; John B. Davis

&NA; Capsaicin, resiniferatoxin, protons or heat have been shown to activate an ion channel, termed the rat vanilloid receptor‐1 (rVR1), originally isolated by expression cloning for a capsaicin sensitive phenotype. Here we describe the cloning of a human vanilloid receptor‐1 (hVR1) cDNA containing a 2517 bp open reading frame that encodes a protein with 92% homology to the rat vanilloid receptor‐1. Oocytes or mammalian cells expressing this cDNA respond to capsaicin, pH and temperature by generating inward membrane currents. Mammalian cells transfected with human VR1 respond to capsaicin with an increase in intracellular calcium. The human VR1 has a chromosomal location of 17p13 and is expressed in human dorsal root ganglia and also at low levels throughout a wide range of CNS and peripheral tissues. Together the sequence homology, similar expression profile and functional properties confirm that the cloned cDNA represents the human orthologue of rat VR1.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2001

Characterisation using FLIPR of human vanilloid VR1 receptor pharmacology

Darren Smart; Jeffrey C. Jerman; Martin J. Gunthorpe; Stephen J Brough; Jennie Ranson; William Cairns; Philip David Hayes; Andrew D. Randall; John B. Davis

A full pharmacological characterisation of the recently cloned human vanilloid VR1 receptor was undertaken. In whole-cell patch clamp studies, capsaicin (10 microM) elicited a slowly activating/deactivating inward current in human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells stably expressing human vanilloid VR1 receptor, which exhibited pronounced outward rectification (reversal potential -2.1+/-0.2 mV) and was abolished by capsazepine (10 microM). In FLIPR-based Ca(2+) imaging studies the rank order of potency was resiniferatoxin>olvanil>capsaicin>anandamide, and all were full agonists. Isovelleral and scutigeral were inactive (1 nM-30 microM). The potencies of capsaicin, olvanil and resiniferatoxin, but not anandamide, were enhanced 2- to 7-fold at pH 6.4. Capsazepine, isovelleral and ruthenium red inhibited the capsaicin (100 nM)-induced Ca(2+) response (pK(B)=6.58+/-0.02, 5.33+/-0.03 and 7.64+/-0.03, respectively). In conclusion, the recombinant human vanilloid VR1 receptor stably expressed in HEK293 cells acted as a ligand-gated, Ca(2+)-permeable channel with similar agonist and antagonist pharmacology to rat vanilloid VR1 receptor, although there were some subtle differences.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2011

Sirt1 overexpression in neurons promotes neurite outgrowth and cell survival through inhibition of the mTOR signaling

Wenjing Guo; Lei Qian; Jing Zhang; Wei Zhang; Alastair D. Morrison; Philip David Hayes; Steve Wilson; Tongsheng Chen; Jie Zhao

The mammalian nicotinamide‐adenine dinucleotide (NAD)‐dependent deacetylase Sirt1 impacts different processes involved in the maintenance of brain integrity and in the pathogenic pathways associated with several neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimers disease. Here we used human Sirt1 transgenic mice to demonstrate that neuron‐specific Sirt1 overexpression promoted neurite outgrowth and improved cell viability under normal and nutrient‐limiting conditions in primary culture systems and that Sirt1‐overexpressing neurons exhibited higher tolerance to cell death or degeneration induced by amyloid‐β1–42 oligomers. Coincidentally, we found that enhanced Sirt1 expression in neurons downregulated the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) protein levels and its phosphorylation without changes in its mRNA levels, which was accompanied by concomitant inhibition of the mTOR downstream signaling activity as revealed by decreased p70S6 kinase (p70S6K) phosphorylation at Thr389. Consistently with this, using a Sirt1 siRNA transfection approach, we observed that reduction of endogenous mouse Sirt1 led to increased levels of mTOR and phosphorylation of itself and p70S6K as well as impaired cell survival and neurite outgrowth in wild‐type mouse primary neurons, corroborating a suppressing effect of mTOR by Sirt1. Correspondingly, the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin markedly improved neuronal cell survival in response to nutrient deprivation and significantly enhanced neurite outgrowth in wild‐type mouse neurons. The protective effect of rapamycin was extended to neurons even with Sirt1 siRNA knockdown that displayed developmental abnormalities compared with siRNA control‐treated cells. Collectively, our findings suggest that Sirt1 may act to promote growth and survival of neurons in the central nervous system via its negative modulation of mTOR signaling.


Neuropharmacology | 2006

SB-699551-A (3-cyclopentyl-N-[2-(dimethylamino) ethyl]-N-[(4'-{[(2-phenylethyl)amino]methyl}-4-biphenylyl) methyl]propanamide dihydrochloride), a novel 5-ht5A receptor-selective antagonist, enhances 5-HT neuronal function : Evidence for an autoreceptor role for the 5-ht5A receptor in guinea pig brain

David R. Thomas; Ellen M. Soffin; Claire Roberts; James N.C. Kew; Raúl de la Flor; Lee A. Dawson; Victoria Anne Honey Fry; Sara A. Coggon; Stefania Faedo; Philip David Hayes; David F. Corbett; Ceri H. Davies; Jim J. Hagan


Archive | 1998

VANILREP1 polynucleotides and VANILREP1 polypeptides

David Malcolm Duckworth; Philip David Hayes; Helen Jane Meadows; John B. Davis


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2004

Cloning and pharmacological characterisation of the guinea pig 5-ht5A receptor

David R. Thomas; Christopher Larminie; Helen R Lyons; Andrew Fosberry; Matthew Hill; Philip David Hayes


Archive | 1998

Human vanilloid receptor homologue Vanilrep1

John B. Davis; David Malcolm Duckworth; Philip David Hayes; Helen Jane Meadows


Archive | 1999

Human vanilloid receptor homologues

John B. Davis; David Malcolm Duckworth; Philip David Hayes


Archive | 2000

Identification of three putative calcium channel vanilrep peptides

Rosemary E. Kelsell; John B. Davis; Philip David Hayes; Graham D. Smith

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