Background: Nasal breathing is important for maintaining physiological respiration. However, airflow in the nasal cavity has an inherent cooling effect and may suppress ciliary beating, an essential frontline defense in the airway. Nasal airflow is thought to be perceived by transient receptor potential (TRP) M8, a thermoreceptor for cool temperatures. We herein investigated the effect of the activation of thermosensitive TRPs for cool/cold temperatures on ciliary beating and searched for a compensatory mechanism that maintains ciliary beating against the fall of temperature in the human nasal mucosa.
Methods and Results: Inferior turbinates were collected from patients with chronic hypertrophic rhinitis, and ex vivo ciliary beat frequency (CBF) was immediately measured using a high-speed digital video camera attached to a phase-contrast light microscope. The samples were also subjected to fluorescence immunohistochemistry and real-time RT-PCR for TRPA1/TRPM8. CBF was significantly increased by adding either cinnamaldehyde (TRPA1 agonist) or l-menthol (TRPM8 agonist), and this increase was inhibited by pannexin-1 blockers, carbenoxolone and probenecid. Immunohistochemistry detected TRPA1 and TRPM8 on the epithelial surface and in the submucosal nasal glands. Expressions of mRNAs for these receptors were confirmed by real-time RT-PCR.
Conclusions: These results indicate the stimulatory effect of the activation of TRPA1/TRPM8 on ciliary beating in the nasal mucosa, which would be advantageous to maintain airway mucosal defense under normal nasal breathing. This stimulatory effect is likely to be mediated by pannexin-1. Understanding the regulatory mechanism of airway ciliary beating should aid in the development of new, effective treatments for intractable airway diseases. Background
Nasal breathing is important for maintaining physiological respiration. However, airflow in the nasal cavity has an inherent cooling effect and may suppress ciliary beating, an essential frontline defense in the airway. Nasal airflow is thought to be perceived by transient receptor potential (TRP) M8, a thermoreceptor for cool temperatures. We herein investigated the effect of the activation of thermosensitive TRPs for cool/cold temperatures on ciliary beating and searched for a compensatory mechanism that maintains ciliary beating against the fall of temperature in the human nasal mucosa.