AI Article Synopsis

  • Nav1.9 is a key sodium channel that plays a crucial role in regulating action potentials, particularly in neurons related to pain perception, such as myenteric neurons and small-diameter dorsal root ganglion neurons.
  • Recent studies have linked gain-of-function mutations in Nav1.9 to specific human pain disorders, including familial episodic pain type 3 and small fiber neuropathy.
  • A new mutation, N816K, identified in a child experiencing early-onset episodic pain, results in increased current density and hyperexcitable DRG neurons, linking this mutation to heightened pain sensitivity.

Article Abstract

Voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.9 is a threshold channel that regulates action potential firing. Nav1.9 is preferentially expressed in myenteric neurons, and small-diameter dorsal root ganglion (DRG) and trigeminal ganglion neurons including nociceptors. Recent studies have demonstrated a monogenic Mendelian link of Nav1.9 to human pain disorders. Gain-of-function variants in Nav1.9, which cause smaller depolarizations of RMP, have been identified in patients with familial episodic pain type 3 (FEPS3) and the more common pain disorder small fiber neuropathy. To explore the phenotypic spectrum of Nav1.9 channelopathy, here we report a new Nav1.9 mutation, N816K, in a child with early-onset episodic pain in both legs, episodic abdominal pain, and chronic constipation. Sequencing of further selected pain genes was normal. N816K alters a residue at the N-terminus of loop 2, proximal to the cytoplasmic terminus of transmembrane segment 6 in domain II. Voltage-clamp recordings demonstrate that Nav1.9-N816K significantly increases current density and hyperpolarizes voltage-dependence of activation by 10 mV, enabling a larger window current. Current-clamp recordings in DRG neurons shows that N816K channels depolarize RMP of small DRG neurons by 7 mV, reduce current threshold of firing an action potential and render DRG neurons hyperexcitable. Taken together these data demonstrate gain-of-function attributes of the newly described N816K mutation at the channel and cellular levels, which are consistent with a pain phenotype in the carrier of this mutation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6733892PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2019.00918DOI Listing

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