Cell Reports
Volume 30, Issue 13, 31 March 2020, Pages 4505-4517.e5
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Article
Non-conventional Axonal Organelles Control TRPM8 Ion Channel Trafficking and Peripheral Cold Sensing

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2020.03.017Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • TRPM8 nerve trafficking depends on a non-conventional axonal secretory route

  • GBF1 and RAB6 interaction orchestrate axonal Golgi satellites in nerve fibers

  • Local disruption of axonal secretory organelles affects TRPM8 cold sensing in mice

Summary

TRPM8 is the main ion channel responsible for cold transduction in the somatosensory system. Nerve terminal availability of TRPM8 determines cold sensitivity, but how axonal secretory organelles control channel delivery remains poorly understood. Here we examine the distribution of TRPM8 and trafficking organelles in cold-sensitive peripheral axons and disrupt trafficking by targeting the ARF-GEF GBF1 pharmacologically or the small GTPase RAB6 by optogenetics. In axons of the sciatic nerve, inhibition of GBF1 interrupts TRPM8 trafficking and increases association with the trans-Golgi network, LAMP1, and Golgi satellites, which distribute profusely along the axonal shaft. Accordingly, both TRPM8-dependent ongoing activity and cold-evoked responses reversibly decline upon GBF1 inhibition in nerve endings of corneal cold thermoreceptors. Inhibition of RAB6, which also associates to Golgi satellites, decreases cold-induced responses in vivo. Our results support a non-conventional axonal trafficking mechanism controlling the availability of TRPM8 in axons and cold sensitivity in the peripheral nervous system.

Keywords

axon
Golgi
GBF1
RAB6
cold transduction
primary sensory neurons
thermo-TRP channels
nerve terminal
Golgi satellites
secretory vesicles

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