The mechanism of cGMP production in olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) is poorly understood, although this messenger takes part in several key processes such as adaptation, neuronal development, and long-term cellular responses to odorant stimulation. Many aspects of the regulation of cGMP in OSNs are still unknown or highly controversial, such as its subcellular heterogeneity, mechanism of coupling to odorant receptors and downstream targets. Here, we have investigated the dynamics and the intracellular distribution of cGMP in living rat OSNs in culture transfected with a genetically encoded sensor for cGMP. We demonstrate that OSNs treated with pharmacological stimuli able to activate membrane or soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) presented an increase in cGMP in the entire neuron, from cilia-dendrite to the axon terminus-growth cone. Upon odorant stimulation, a rise in cGMP was again found in the entire neuron, including the axon terminus, where it is locally synthesized. The odorant-dependent rise in cGMP is due to sGC activation by nitric oxide (NO) and requires an increase of cAMP. The link between cAMP and NO synthase appears to be the rise in cytosolic Ca2 + concentration elicited by either plasma membrane Ca2 + channel activation or Ca2 + mobilization from stores via the guanine nucleotide exchange factor Epac. Finally, we show that a cGMP rise can elicit both in vitro and in vivo the phosphorylation of nuclear CREB, suggesting that this signaling pathway may be relevant for both local events (pathfinding, neurotransmitter release) and more distal processes involving gene expression regulation. © 2011 the authors.
CITATION STYLE
Pietrobon, M., Zamparo, I., Maritan, M., Franchi, S. A., Pozzan, T., & Lodovichi, C. (2011). Interplay among cGMP, cAMP, and Ca2+ in living olfactory sensory neurons in vitro and in vivo. Journal of Neuroscience, 31(23), 8395–8405. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.6722-10.2011
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