| Literature DB >> 24692452 |
Jean-Marc Goaillard1, Martial A Dufour.
Abstract
Drugs could treat neuropathic pain more effectively if they simultaneously targeted two or more types of ion channel.Entities:
Keywords: bursting; degeneracy; dynamic clamp; excitability; membrane potential oscillations; neuropathic pain
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24692452 PMCID: PMC3970757 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.02615
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140
Figure 1.Multiple pathways to switch between normal excitability and hyperexcitability in a neuron.
Primary afferent neurons can display a normal excitability profile, characterized by the firing of a single action potential (blue trace) in response to a current step, or a ‘neuropathic’ hyperexcitability profile, characterized by the repetitive firing of action potentials in response to the same stimulus (red trace). Ratté et al. have found that the switch between these two profiles occurs when a tipping point is crossed, and this transition can be induced by varying the sodium (horizontal axis) and potassium conductances (vertical). For instance (left part of the graph), decreasing the potassium conductance (1), increasing the sodium conductance (2) or applying both changes simultaneously (3) induces the transition from normal to neuropathic behaviour, while increasing both conductances (4) preserves a normal excitability profile. Conversely, reversing the neuropathic profile can be achieved by increasing the potassium conductance (5), decreasing the sodium conductance (6) or applying both changes simultaneously (7). Note that, for conductance modifications of the same magnitude (arrows 5, 6 and 7), concerted changes in both conductances are much more efficient in reversing the neuropathic phenotype: the purple squares reached with arrows 5 and 6 are much closer to the tipping point than the blue square reached with arrow 7. This may explain why drugs targeting single ion channels are less efficient at treating neuropathic pain.