Nav1.7 is required for normal C-low threshold mechanoreceptor function in humans and mice
Author(s) -
Steven J. Middleton,
Irene Perini,
Andreas C. Themistocleous,
Greg A. Weir,
Kirsty McCann,
Allison M. Barry,
Andrew Marshall,
Michael Lee,
Leah M. Mayo,
Ma Bohic,
Georgios Baskozos,
India Morrison,
Line S. Löken,
Sarah McIntyre,
Saad S. Nagi,
Roland Staud,
Isac Sehlstedt,
Richard D. Johnson,
Johan Wessberg,
John N. Wood,
C. Geoffrey Woods,
Aziz Moqrich,
Håkan Olausson,
David Bennett
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/awab482
Subject(s) - mechanosensation , mechanoreceptor , threshold of pain , sodium channel , audiology , sensory threshold , neuroscience , medicine , psychology , sensory system , chemistry , anesthesia , sodium , ion channel , cognitive science , receptor , organic chemistry
Patients with bi-allelic loss of function mutations in the voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7 present with congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP), whilst low threshold mechanosensation is reportedly normal. Using psychophysics (n = 6 CIP participants and n = 86 healthy controls) and facial EMG (n = 3 CIP participants and n = 8 healthy controls) we have found that these patients also have abnormalities in the encoding of affective touch which is mediated by the specialised afferents; C-low threshold mechanoreceptors (C-LTMRs). In the mouse we found that C-LTMRs express high levels of Nav1.7. Genetic loss or selective pharmacological inhibition of Nav1.7 in C-LTMRs resulted in a significant reduction in the total sodium current density, an increased mechanical threshold and reduced sensitivity to non-noxious cooling. The behavioural consequence of loss of Nav1.7 in C-LTMRs in mice was an elevation in the von Frey mechanical threshold and less sensitivity to cooling on a thermal gradient. Nav1.7 is therefore not only essential for normal pain perception but also for normal C-LTMR function, cool sensitivity and affective touch.
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