Nociceptor-specific gene deletion reveals a major role for Nav1.7 (PN1) in acute and inflammatory pain
Mohammed A. Nassar,L Caroline Stirling,Greta Forlani,Mark D. Baker,Elizabeth A. Matthews,Anthony H. Dickenson,John N. Wood +6 more
TL;DR: All inflammatory pain responses evoked by a range of stimuli, such as formalin, carrageenan, complete Freund's adjuvant, or nerve growth factor, were reduced or abolished and should prove useful in understanding the role of other broadly expressed genes in pain pathways.
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Abstract: Nine voltage-gated sodium channels are expressed in complex patterns in mammalian nerve and muscle. Three channels, Na(v)11.7, Na(v)1.8, and Na(v)1.9, are expressed selectively in peripheral damage-sensing neurons. Because there are no selective blockers of these channels, we used gene ablation in mice to examine the function of Na(v)1.7 (PN1) in pain pathways. A global Na(v)1.7-null mutant was found to die shortly after birth. We therefore used the Cre-loxP system to generate nociceptor-specific knockouts. Nav1.8 is only expressed in peripheral, mainly nociceptive, sensory neurons. We knocked Cre recombinase into the Na(v)1.8 locus to generate heterozygous mice expressing Cre recombinase in Na(v)1.8-positive sensory neurons. Crossing these animals with mice where Na(v)1.7 exons 14 and 15 were flanked by loxP sites produced nociceptor-specific knockout mice that were viable and apparently normal. These animals showed increased mechanical and thermal pain thresholds. Remarkably, all inflammatory pain responses evoked by a range of stimuli, such as formalin, carrageenan, complete Freund's adjuvant, or nerve growth factor, were reduced or abolished. A congenital pain syndrome in humans recently has been mapped to the Na(v)1.7 gene, SCN9A. Dominant Nav1.7 mutations lead to edema, redness, warmth, and bilateral pain in human erythermalgia patients, confirming an important role for Na(v)1.7 in inflammatory pain. Nociceptor-specific gene ablation should prove useful in understanding the role of other broadly expressed genes in pain pathways.
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Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Pain
TL;DR: Genetic, electrophysiological, and pharmacological studies are elucidating the molecular mechanisms that underlie detection, coding, and modulation of noxious stimuli that generate pain.
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An SCN9A channelopathy causes congenital inability to experience pain
James J. Cox,Frank Reimann,Adeline K Nicholas,Gemma K. Thornton,Emma Roberts,Kelly Springell,G. Karbani,Hussain Jafri,Jovaria Mannan,Yasmin Raashid,Lihadh Al-Gazali,Henan Hamamy,Enza Maria Valente,Shaun Gorman,Richard Aled Williams,Duncan McHale,John N. Wood,Fiona M. Gribble,C. Geoffrey Woods +18 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that SCN9A is an essential and non-redundant requirement for nociception in humans, and should stimulate the search for novel analgesics that selectively target this sodium channel subunit.
Nociceptors: the sensors of the pain pathway
TL;DR: Current work in this field is providing researchers with a more thorough understanding of nociceptor cell biology at molecular and systems levels and insight that will allow the targeted design of novel pain therapeutics.
Nociceptors—Noxious Stimulus Detectors
Clifford J. Woolf,Qiufu Ma +1 more
TL;DR: The genesis of nociceptors during development and the intrinsic properties of nock-like neurons that enable them to transduce, conduct, and transmit nocICEptors are highlighted and how their phenotypic plasticity contributes to clinical pain is discussed.
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SCN9A Mutations in Paroxysmal Extreme Pain Disorder: Allelic Variants Underlie Distinct Channel Defects and Phenotypes
Caroline Fertleman,Mark D. Baker,K. Parker,Sarah Moffatt,F. V. Elmslie,Bjarke Abrahamsen,Johan Ostman,Norbert Klugbauer,John N. Wood,R. Mark Gardiner,M Rees +10 more
TL;DR: A genome-wide linkage search followed by mutational analysis of the candidate gene SCN9A, which encodes hNa(v)1.7, identified eight missense mutations in 11 families and 2 sporadic cases of PEPD mutants that revealed a reduction in fast inactivation, leading to persistent sodium current.
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