| Literature DB >> 17167076 |
Fumimasa Amaya1, Haibin Wang, Michael Costigan, Andrew J Allchorne, Jon P Hatcher, Julie Egerton, Tania Stean, Valerie Morisset, David Grose, Martin J Gunthorpe, Iain P Chessell, Simon Tate, Paula J Green, Clifford J Woolf.
Abstract
We used a mouse with deletion of exons 4, 5, and 6 of the SCN11A (sodium channel, voltage-gated, type XI, alpha) gene that encodes the voltage-gated sodium channel Na(v)1.9 to assess its contribution to pain. Na(v)1.9 is present in nociceptor sensory neurons that express TRPV1, bradykinin B2, and purinergic P2X3 receptors. In Na(v)1.9-/- mice, the non-inactivating persistent tetrodotoxin-resistant sodium TTXr-Per current is absent, whereas TTXr-Slow is unchanged. TTXs currents are unaffected by the mutation of Na(v)1.9. Pain hypersensitivity elicited by intraplantar administration of prostaglandin E2, bradykinin, interleukin-1beta, capsaicin, and P2X3 and P2Y receptor agonists, but not NGF, is either reduced or absent in Na(v)1.9-/- mice, whereas basal thermal and mechanical pain sensitivity is unchanged. Thermal, but not mechanical, hypersensitivity produced by peripheral inflammation (intraplanatar complete Freund's adjuvant) is substantially diminished in the null allele mutant mice, whereas hypersensitivity in two neuropathic pain models is unchanged in the Na(v)1.9-/- mice. Na(v)1.9 is, we conclude, an effector of the hypersensitivity produced by multiple inflammatory mediators on nociceptor peripheral terminals and therefore plays a key role in mediating peripheral sensitization.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 17167076 PMCID: PMC6674969 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4015-06.2006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167