| Literature DB >> 35997391 |
Marco Cascella1, Maria Rosaria Muzio2, Federica Monaco1, Davide Nocerino1, Alessandro Ottaiano3, Francesco Perri4, Massimo Antonio Innamorato5.
Abstract
Pain and nociception are different phenomena. Nociception is the result of complex activity in sensory pathways. On the other hand, pain is the effect of interactions between nociceptive processes, and cognition, emotions, as well as the social context of the individual. Alterations in the nociceptive route can have different genesis and affect the entire sensorial process. Genetic problems in nociception, clinically characterized by reduced or absent pain sensitivity, compose an important chapter within pain medicine. This chapter encompasses a wide range of very rare diseases. Several genes have been identified. These genes encode the Nav channels 1.7 and 1.9 (SCN9A, and SCN11A genes, respectively), NGFβ and its receptor tyrosine receptor kinase A, as well as the transcription factor PRDM12, and autophagy controllers (TECPR2). Monogenic disorders provoke hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies. Their clinical pictures are extremely variable, and a precise classification has yet to be established. Additionally, pain insensitivity is described in diverse numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities, such as Angelman syndrome, Prader Willy syndrome, Chromosome 15q duplication syndrome, and Chromosome 4 interstitial deletion. Studying these conditions could be a practical strategy to better understand the mechanisms of nociception and investigate potential therapeutic targets against pain.Entities:
Keywords: Angelman syndrome; Chromosome 15q duplication syndrome; Chromosome 4 interstitial deletion; Prader Willy syndrome; cancer; hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies; nociception; nociceptors; pain insensitivity
Year: 2022 PMID: 35997391 PMCID: PMC9397076 DOI: 10.3390/pathophysiology29030035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathophysiology ISSN: 0928-4680
Figure 1Annual trend of selected and discussed publications (from 1 January 2005 to 30 March 2022).
Main properties of sensory receptors (free nerve endings and organs) [9,10].
| Type | Structure | Fiber and Diameters | Axonal Conduction Velocities | Location | Stimuli | Act. Thresh. | Effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free nerve endings | Minimally specialized nerve endings | C | 0.5–2 m/s | Skin | Polymodal Temperature | High | Persisting pain sensations |
| Free nerve endings | Minimally specialized nerve endings | Aδ | 3–30 m/s | Skin | Pressure Temperature | High | Rapid, sharp pain |
| Free nerve endings | Minimally specialized nerve endings | Aβ | 6–12 m/s | Skin | Pressure | High | Rapid, sharp pain |
| Meissner’s corpuscles * | Encapsulated; dermal papillae of glabrous skin | Aβ 6–12 μm | — | Most common mechanoreceptors of “glabrous” skin | Touch, pressure (dynamic) | Low | Somatosensory acuity, (digital extremities and palmar skin) |
| Pacinian corpuscles | Encapsulated; onion-like covering | Aβ 6–12 μm | — | Skin, Subcutaneous tissues, viscera | Vibration (dynamic, 250 Hz) Deep pressure (quasi-static) | Low | Location of touch sensations |
| Merkel’s disks ° | Encapsulated; associated with peptide- releasing cells | Aβ | — | Skin, hair follicles | Low vibrations (5–15 Hz) | Low | Information on pressure, position, and deep static touch |
| Ruffini’s corpuscles | Enlarged dendritic endings. Elongated capsules | Aβ 6–12 μm | — | Skin (deep layers) | Mechanical deformation. | Low | Kinesthetic control |
| Muscle spindles | Highly specialized (intrafusal fibers) | Ia and II | — | Muscles | Muscle length | Low | Stretch reflex |
| Golgi tendon organs ^ | Highly specialized | Ib | — | Tendons | Muscle tension | Low | Golgi tendon reflex (sensory component) |
| Joint receptors | Minimally specialized | — | — | Joints | Joint excursion | Low | Limbs position and movement |
Legend: * They have a role in peripheral and diabetic neuropathy. ° It is fundamental for tactile discrimination. ^ Large-diameter rapidly conducting Aα fibers and insensitive to passive muscle stretch.
Figure 2Schematic features of the DRG nociceptor. The pseudounipolar neuron has its cell body located in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG). Once the stimuli reach the terminal receptor, an ionic current is generated. It provokes a gradual potential that modulates the discharge of action potentials in the afferent nerve fibers directed to the CNS. Each receptor generates an ionic current with its characteristic voltage response (intensity (mV) and duration (Time)) and determines the specificity of the sensation. Stimuli are carried by multiple types of fibers. Tactile/pressure stimuli are conducted by Aβ fibers, mechanical/thermal/chemical stimuli by Aδ fibers, and polymodal stimuli by C fibers. Aδ fibers are myelinated, fast-conducting fibers. They conduct the first part of the pain stimulus, which is the most defined, acute, and superficial one (a spike of intensity in a shorter time). The non-myelinated C fibers are slow-conducting and convey the second part of a pain stimulus in a more lasting, profound, and less defined way (reduced in intensity and longer in the time). Abbreviations. TrkA: tropomyosin kinase A receptor; ASIC: acid-sensitive ion channel; TRPV1–4: transient receptor potential cation channel subfamily V; TRPA1: potential cation channel of the transient receptor, subfamily A, member 1; TRPM8: member of the M (melastatin) subfamily of the potential cation channel of transient receptor 8; Nav (1.1–1.8): voltage-gated sodium channels; CGRP: peptide related to the calcitonin gene; 5-HT: 5-hydroxytryptamine; NGF: nerve growth factor; IL-1β: Interleukin 1 beta.
Monogenic disorders featuring pain insensitivity.
| Disease | Gene(s) | Encoding/Inheritance | Pain Features | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSAN Type I | SPTLC1 (HSAN-IA); SPTLC2 (HSAN-IC) | Reduced activity of serine palmitoyltransferase; Autosomal dominant | Painless injuries to the tongue and limbs | [ |
| HSAN Type II | WNK1 (HSAN-IIA) | TRPV4 (WNK1 gene); Nav1.7 (loss of function of SCN9A); | Congenital insensitivity to pain. Global pain insensitivity | [ |
| HSAN Type III | IKBKAP | ELP1; | Pain insensitivity or reduced pain sensitivity | [ |
| HSAN Type IV | TRKA | Autosomal recessive | Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis (CIPA); Global pain insensitivity | [ |
| HSAN Type V | NGFβ | NGF; | Congenital insensibility to pain, lack of temperature sensing; reduced C-fibres | [ |
| HSAN Type VI | DST | Dystonin; | Reduced pain sensitivity | [ |
| HSAN Type VII | SCN11A | NaV1.9 channel. Gain of function with sustained depolarization | Decreased pain sensitivity | [ |
| HSAN Type VIII | PRDM12 | PRDM12; | Non-global pain insensitivity | [ |
| HSAN Type IX | TECPR2 | Autosomal recessive | Decreased pain sensitivity | [ |
Abbreviations: HSAN, hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy; ELP1, elongator complex protein 1; NGF, nerve growth factor; PRDM12, PR domain containing member 12.
Numeric/structural chromosomal abnormalities with reduced pain or insensitivity.
| Disease | Genetics | Encoding/Inheritance/Pain Features | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Angelman syndrome | Deletion or mutation in the maternal chromosome region containing the | High resistance to pain in about two-thirds of patients (67%) | [ |
| Prader Willy syndrome | Paternal 15q11.2–q13 deletion | A high pain threshold is a very common finding | [ |
| Chromosome 15q duplication syndrome | Duplication of the PWACR region (15q11.2–q13.1) | High pain threshold in 87% | [ |
| Chromosome 4 interstitial deletion | Cr4 del q31.3 to q32.2 | High pain threshold with preserved tactile sensitivity | [ |
Abbreviations: PWACR, Prader–Willi/Angelman critical region.
Ongoing clinical investigations on hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies.
| Disease | Study type | Intervention(s) | Outcome | Study ID * |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSAN-I | RCT | L-serine supplementation (400 mg/kg/d, 2 years) | Disease severity ° | NCT01733407 |
| HSAN-III | RCT | Proprioceptive inputs (cortical representation) | Proprioception and Sensorimotor Control | NCT02876939 |
| HSAN-III | Observational | N/A | Database. Predictive biomarkers of disease progression and severity | NCT03920774 |
| Rare Disease | Observational | N/A | Genetics; Pain; Diagnosis (e.g., skin biopsy) | NCT02696746 |
| Rare Diseases ^ | Observational | N/A | Patient Registry & Natural History Study | NCT01793168 |
| Pain sensitivity alterations † | Observational | N/A | Pain score, Measures of quality of life, Neurophysiology, Imaging | NCT02696746 |
Legend: * From https://clinicaltrials.gov (accessed on 30 March 2022); ° Charcot Marie Tooth Neuropathy Score; ^ Coordination of Rare Diseases at Sanford Registry (CoRDS); † Painful Channelopathies Study. Abbreviations: HSAN, hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies.