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Papers of the Week


Papers: 30 Mar 2019 - 5 Apr 2019


Human Studies


2019 Nov 01


J Neurotrauma


36


21

Association of a functional polymorphism in the CHRFAM7A gene with inflammatory response mediators and neuropathic pain after spinal cord injury.

Authors

Huang W, Kabbani N, Brannan T, Lin M K, Theiss M, Hamilton J, Ecklund J, Conley YP, Vodovotz Y, Brienza D, Wagner AK, Robbins E A, Sowa GA, Lipsky R
J Neurotrauma. 2019 Nov 01; 36(21):3026-3033.
PMID: 30924722.

Abstract

The alpha 7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, α7 nAChR, plays a central role in regulating inflammatory responses. Previous studies showed that pharmacological inhibitors of α7nAChR have a pro-inflammatory effect, increasing the circulating levels of cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα). This study focused on how genetic polymorphisms of the partially duplicated α7nAChR gene (CHRFAM7A), which is highly expressed in peripheral blood cells, contribute to functional outcome after spinal cord injury (SCI). In a cohort of 27 SCI patients and 25 emergency room consented controls (% F/M: 15/85; 24/76, mean ± SE age: 35 ± 1.38 and 35 ± 2.0 respectively), a panel of circulating cytokines, noradrenergic metabolite (normetanephrine [NMN]) levels, and clinical data were available within the first 7 days post-injury (DPI) up to 90 DPI, and were investigated in the acute/subacute (DPI 1-21) and intermediate (DPI 22-90) temporal periods. Cytokine and NMN plasma levels on different DPI were analyzed as a function of CHRFAM7A genotype. TNFα levels, as a representative of some elevated inflammatory mediators, were nearly 3-fold higher in individuals carrying the del2bp variant of the CHRFAM7A gene compared to that in the no deletion genotype (p = 0.001 ANOVA) 3-wks DPI, and 2-fold higher than genotype matched acute/subacute non-SCI injury controls within 7 days DPI. In contrast, NMN levels were initially unchanged, although after three weeks, NMN levels were significantly decreased in SCI individuals carrying the del2bp variant compared to non-carriers (p = 0.011 ANOVA). Numeric pain scores over this same period post-injury were significantly elevated in SCI patients carrying the del2bp variant relative to non-carriers (p = 0.001 ANOVA). Taken together, these data reveal that pro-inflammatory responses associated with CHRFAM7A gene variation may also be associated with differences in pain experience in patients following SCI, at least during the intermediate phase.