Endogenous opioids contribute to insensitivity to pain in humans and mice lacking sodium channel Nav1.7

Michael S. Minett(University College London), Vanessa Pereira(University College London), Shafaq Sikandar(University College London), Ayako Matsuyama(University College London), Stéphane Lolignier(University College London), Alexandros H. Kanellopoulos(University College London), Flavia Mancini(University College London), Gian Domenico Iannetti(University College London), Yury D. Bogdanov(University College London), Sonia Santana‐Varela(University College London), Queensta Millet(University College London), Georgios Baskozos(Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology), Raymond J. MacAllister(University College London), James J. Cox(University College London), Jing Zhao(University College London), John N. Wood(University College London)
Nature Communications
December 4, 2015
Cited by 186Open Access
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Abstract

Loss-of-function mutations in the SCN9A gene encoding voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7 cause congenital insensitivity to pain in humans and mice. Surprisingly, many potent selective antagonists of Nav1.7 are weak analgesics. We investigated whether Nav1.7, as well as contributing to electrical signalling, may have additional functions. Here we report that Nav1.7 deletion has profound effects on gene expression, leading to an upregulation of enkephalin precursor Penk mRNA and met-enkephalin protein in sensory neurons. In contrast, Nav1.8-null mutant sensory neurons show no upregulated Penk mRNA expression. Application of the opioid antagonist naloxone potentiates noxious peripheral input into the spinal cord and dramatically reduces analgesia in both female and male Nav1.7-null mutant mice, as well as in a human Nav1.7-null mutant. These data suggest that Nav1.7 channel blockers alone may not replicate the analgesic phenotype of null mutant humans and mice, but may be potentiated with exogenous opioids.


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