Susana Quirce
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Susana Quirce.
The FASEB Journal | 2011
Pierluigi Valente; Asia Fernández-Carvajal; María Camprubí-Robles; Ana Gomis; Susana Quirce; Félix Viana; Gregorio Fernández-Ballester; José M. González-Ros; Carlos Belmonte; Rosa Planells-Cases; Antonio Ferrer-Montiel
The transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) channel is a thermosensory receptor implicated in diverse physiological and pathological processes. The TRP domain, a highly conserved region in the C terminus adjacent to the internal channel gate, is critical for subunit tetramerization and channel gating. Here, we show that cell‐penetrating, membrane‐anchored peptides patterned after this protein domain are moderate and selective TRPV1 antagonists both in vitro and in vivo, blocking receptor activity in intact rat primary sensory neurons and their peripheral axons with mean decline time of 30 min. The most potent lipopeptide, TRP‐p5, blocked all modes of TRPV1 gating with micromolar efficacy (IC50<10 µM), without significantly affecting other thermoTRP channels. In contrast, its retrosequence or the corresponding sequences of other TRPV channels did not alter TRPV1 channel activity (IC50»100 µM). TRP‐p5 did not affect the capsaicin sensitivity of the vanilloid receptor. Our data suggest that TRP‐p5 interferes with protein‐protein interactions at the level of the TRP domain that are essential for the “conformational” change that leads to gate opening. Therefore, these palmitoylated peptides, which we termed TRPducins, are noncompetitive, voltage‐independent, sequence‐specific TRPV1 blockers. Our findings indicate that TRPducin‐like peptides may embody a novel molecular strategy that can be exploited to generate a selective pharmacological arsenal for the TRP superfamily of ion channels.—Valente, P., Fernández‐Carvajal, A., Camprubí‐Robles, M., Gomis, A., Quirce, S., Viana, F., Fernández‐Ballester, G., González‐Ros, J. M., Belmonte, C., Planells‐Cases, R., Ferrer‐Montiel, A. Membrane‐tethered peptides patterned after the TRP domain (TRPducins) selectively inhibit TRPV1 channel activity. FASEB J. 25, 1628–1640 (2011). www.fasebj.org
Pain | 2013
M. Carmen Acosta; Carolina Luna; Susana Quirce; Carlos Belmonte; Juana Gallar
Summary Ocular discomfort sensations accompanying experimental allergic keratoconjunctivitis are caused by increased responsiveness of corneal polymodal nociceptors, while cold thermoreceptor activity is reduced. Abstract Peripheral neural mechanisms underlying the sensations of irritation, discomfort, and itch accompanying the eye allergic response have not been hitherto analyzed. We explored this question recording the changes in the electrical activity of corneoconjunctival sensory nerve fibers of the guinea pig after an ocular allergic challenge. Sensitization was produced by i.p. ovalbumin followed by repeated application in the eye of 10% ovalbumin on days 14 to 18. Blinking and tearing rate were measured. Spontaneous and stimulus‐evoked (mechanical, thermal, chemical) impulse activity was recorded from mechanonociceptor, polymodal nociceptor and cold corneoscleral sensory afferent fibers. After a single (day 14) or repeated daily exposures to the allergen during the following 3 to 4 days, tearing and blinking rate increased significantly. Also, sensitization was observed in mechanonociceptors (transient reduction of mechanical threshold only on day 14) and in polymodal nociceptors (sustained enhancement of the impulse response to acidic stimulation). In contrast, cold thermoreceptors showed a significant decrease in basal ongoing activity and in the response to cooling. Treatment with the TRPV1 and TRPA1 blockers capsazepine and HC‐030031 reversed the augmented blinking. Only capsazepine attenuated tearing rate increase and sensitization of the polymodal nociceptors response to CO2. Capsazepine also prevented the decrease in cold thermoreceptor activity caused by the allergic challenge. We conclude that changes in nerve impulse activity accompanying the ocular allergic response, primarily mediated by activation of nociceptor’s TRPV1 and to a lesser degree by activation of TRPA1 channels, explain the eye discomfort sensations accompanying allergic episodes.
Pain | 2016
Illés Kovács; Carolina Luna; Susana Quirce; Kamila Mizerska; Gerard Callejo; Ana Cristina Riestra; Laura Fernández-Sánchez; Víctor M. Meseguer; Nicolás Cuenca; Jesus Merayo-Lloves; M. Carmen Acosta; Xavier Gasull; Carlos Belmonte; Juana Gallar
Abstract Dry eye disease (DED) affects >10% of the population worldwide, and it provokes an unpleasant sensation of ocular dryness, whose underlying neural mechanisms remain unknown. Removal of the main lachrymal gland in guinea pigs caused long-term reduction of basal tearing accompanied by changes in the architecture and density of subbasal corneal nerves and epithelial terminals. After 4 weeks, ongoing impulse activity and responses to cooling of corneal cold thermoreceptor endings were enhanced. Menthol (200 &mgr;M) first excited and then inactivated this augmented spontaneous and cold-evoked activity. Comparatively, corneal polymodal nociceptors of tear-deficient eyes remained silent and exhibited only a mild sensitization to acidic stimulation, whereas mechanonociceptors were not affected. Dryness-induced changes in peripheral cold thermoreceptor responsiveness developed in parallel with a progressive excitability enhancement of corneal cold trigeminal ganglion neurons, primarily due to an increase of sodium currents and a decrease of potassium currents. In corneal polymodal nociceptor neurons, sodium currents were enhanced whereas potassium currents remain unaltered. In healthy humans, exposure of the eye surface to menthol vapors or to cold air currents evoked unpleasant sensations accompanied by increased blinking frequency that we attributed to cold thermoreceptor stimulation. Notably, stimulation with menthol reduced the ongoing background discomfort of patients with DED, conceivably due to use-dependent inactivation of cold thermoreceptors. Together, these data indicate that cold thermoreceptors contribute importantly to the detection and signaling of ocular surface wetness, and develop under chronic eye dryness conditions an injury-evoked neuropathic firing that seems to underlie the unpleasant sensations experienced by patients with DED.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014
M. Carmen Acosta; Carolina Luna; Susana Quirce; Carlos Belmonte; Juana Gallar
PURPOSE To produce in guinea pigs a UV-induced keratitis, to analyze the effects of this pathology on corneal nerve activity. METHODS In anesthetized animals, one eye was exposed to 254 nm UV-C radiation (500-1000 mJ/cm(2)), excised 24 to 48 hours later and superfused in vitro. Nerve impulse activity was recorded in ciliary nerve filaments or in corneal sensory terminals of intact and UV-irradiated eyes. Impulse activity in response to mechanical (von Frey hairs), chemical (98.5% CO2 gas jets), and thermal stimulation (cooling from 34°C to 20°C; heating to 50°C) was analyzed. Duration of eyelid closure and blinking and tearing rates were evaluated in control and in UV-irradiated eyes, before and after application of TRPV1, TRPA1, and TRPM8 agonists (100 μM capsaicin; 10 mM AITC, and 200 μM menthol, respectively). RESULTS After irradiation, mechanical threshold of mechano-nociceptor corneo-scleral fibers was reduced (0.59 ± 0.4 vs. 0.27 ± 0.07 mN; P < 0.05) while polymodal nociceptors increased their response to chemical stimulation (1.7 ± 0.2 vs. 3.4 ± 0.5 imps/s; P < 0.05). In contrast, cold thermoreceptors showed a significantly lower ongoing activity at 34°C (8.6 ± 0.5 vs. 6.1 ± 0.9 imp/s; P < 0.05) and a reduced responsiveness to cooling pulses (peak frequency = 29.8 ± 1.3 vs. 18.9 ± 1.8 imp/s; P < 0.001). Blinking but not tearing rate was significantly higher; behavioral responses to topical capsaicin and AITC, but not to menthol were enhanced in UV-irradiated animals. CONCLUSIONS Sensitization of nociceptor and depression of cold thermoreceptor activity following UV radiation appear to result from an action of inflammatory mediators on TRP channels selectively expressed by sensory nerve terminals. Changes in nerve activity possibly underlie discomfort sensations associated with corneo-conjunctival inflammation induced by UV exposure.
RSC Advances | 2016
Paula Pérez-Faginas; M. Teresa Aranda; Roberto de la Torre-Martínez; Susana Quirce; Asia Fernández-Carvajal; Antonio Ferrer-Montiel; Rosario González-Muñiz
A high throughput screening campaign identified nine β,γ-diamino ester derivatives as TRP modulators. A discrete library of new derivatives (23 components) was prepared in a one-pot two step reductive amination reaction, and evaluated for their ability to block the agonist-induced calcium influx in cells expressing human TRPV1, TRPM8 and TRPA1 channels. Selective antagonists for each channel, as well as dual TRPV1/TRPM8 and TRPM8/TRPA1 ligands, were obtained after subtle modification of this linear scaffold. SAR studies revealed the preferred substituents for the selective blockade of the three TRP channels under study. The most potent TRPV1 antagonists displayed submicromolar IC50 values.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Nieves Fresno; Ruth Pérez-Fernández; Carlos Goicoechea; Ibon Alkorta; Asia Fernández-Carvajal; Roberto de la Torre-Martínez; Susana Quirce; Antonio Ferrer-Montiel; M. Isabel Martín; Pilar Goya; José Elguero
Paracetamol also known as acetaminophen, is a widely used analgesic and antipyretic agent. We report the synthesis and biological evaluation of adamantyl analogues of paracetamol with important analgesic properties. The mechanism of nociception of compound 6a/b, an analog of paracetamol, is not exerted through direct interaction with cannabinoid receptors, nor by inhibiting COX. It behaves as an interesting selective TRPA1 channel antagonist, which may be responsible for its analgesic properties, whereas it has no effect on the TRPM8 nor TRPV1 channels. The possibility of replacing a phenyl ring by an adamantyl ring opens new avenues in other fields of medicinal chemistry.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2016
Illés Kovács; Lóránt Dienes; Kristóf Perényi; Susana Quirce; Carolina Luna; Kamila Mizerska; M. Carmen Acosta; Carlos Belmonte; Juana Gallar
Lacosamide is an anti-epileptic drug that is also used for the treatment of painful diabetic neuropathy acting through voltage-gated sodium channels. The aim of this work was to evaluate the effects of acute application of lacosamide on the electrical activity of corneal cold nerve terminals in lacrimo-deficient guinea pigs. Four weeks after unilateral surgical removal of the main lachrimal gland in guinea pigs, corneas were excised and superfused in vitro at 34°C for extracellular electrophysiological recording of nerve terminal impulse activity of cold thermosensitive nerve terminals. The characteristics of the spontaneous and the stimulus-evoked (cooling ramps from 34°C to 15°C) activity before and in presence of lacosamide 100µM and lidocaine 100µM were compared. Cold nerve terminals (n=34) recorded from dry eye corneas showed significantly enhanced spontaneous activity (8.0±1.1 vs. 5.2±0.7imp/s; P<0.05) and cold response (21.2±1.7 vs. 16.8±1.3imp/s; P<0.05) as well as reduced cold threshold (1.5±0.1 vs. 2.8±0.2 Δ°C; P<0.05) to cooling ramps compared to terminals (n=58) from control animals. Both lacosamide and lidocaine decreased spontaneous activity and peak response to cooling ramps significantly (P<0.05). Temperature threshold was increased by the addition of lidocaine (P<0.05) but not lacosamide (P>0.05) to the irrigation fluid. In summary, the application of lacosamide results in a significant decrease of the augmented spontaneous activity and responsiveness to cold of corneal sensory nerves from tear-deficient animals. Based on these promising results we speculate that lacosamide might be used to reduce the hyperexcitability of corneal cold receptors caused by prolonged ocular surface dryness due to hyposecretory or evaporative dry eye disease.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2009
Carlos Belmonte; Tansy Donovan-Rodriguez; Carolina Luna; Susana Quirce; Andres Parra; M. C. Acosta; Juana Gallar
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2009
M. C. Acosta; Carolina Luna; Susana Quirce; Carlos Belmonte; Juana Gallar
Visual Neuroscience | 2018
Anton Delwig; Shawnta Y. Chaney; Andrea S. Bertke; Jan Verweij; Susana Quirce; DeLaine D. Larsen; Cindy F. Yang; Ethan D. Buhr; Russell N. Van Gelder; Juana Gallar; Todd P. Margolis; David R. Copenhagen