Animals requiring purposeful movement for survival are endowed with mechanoreceptors, called proprioceptors, that provide essential sensory feedback from muscles and joints to spinal cord circuits, which modulates motor output. Despite the essential nature of proprioceptive signaling in daily life, the mechanisms governing proprioceptor activity are poorly understood. Here, we identified nonredundant roles for two voltage-gated sodium channels (Nas), Na1.1 and Na1.6, in mammalian proprioception. Deletion of Na1.6 in somatosensory neurons (Na1.6 mice) causes severe motor deficits accompanied by loss of proprioceptive transmission, which contrasts with our previous findings using similar mouse models to target Na1.1 (Na1.1). In Na1.6 animals, we observed impairments in proprioceptor end-organ structure and a marked reduction in skeletal muscle myofiber size that were absent in Na1.1 mice. We attribute the differential contributions of Na1.1 and Na1.6 to distinct cellular localization patterns. Collectively, we provide evidence that Nas uniquely shape neural signaling within a somatosensory modality.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11708877 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.ads6660 | DOI Listing |
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