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Papers of the Week


Papers: 8 Feb 2020 - 14 Feb 2020


Animal Studies

PAIN TYPE:
Itch


2020 Feb 11


Sci Rep


10


1

Complementary roles of murine Na1.7, Na1.8 and Na1.9 in acute itch signalling.

Authors

Kühn H, Kappes L, Wolf K, Gebhardt L, Neurath MF, Reeh P, Fischer M J, Kremer AE
Sci Rep. 2020 Feb 11; 10(1):2326.
PMID: 32047194.

Abstract

Acute pruritus occurs in various disorders. Despite severe repercussions on quality of life treatment options remain limited. Voltage-gated sodium channels (Na) are indispensable for transformation and propagation of sensory signals implicating them as drug targets. Here, Na1.7, 1.8 and 1.9 were compared for their contribution to itch by analysing Na-specific knockout mice. Acute pruritus was induced by a comprehensive panel of pruritogens (C48/80, endothelin, 5-HT, chloroquine, histamine, lysophosphatidic acid, trypsin, SLIGRL, β-alanine, BAM8-22), and scratching was assessed using a magnet-based recording technology. We report an unexpected stimulus-dependent diversity in Na channel-mediated itch signalling. Na1.7 showed substantial scratch reduction mainly towards strong pruritogens. Na1.8 impaired histamine and 5-HT-induced scratching while Na1.9 was involved in itch signalling towards 5-HT, C48/80 and SLIGRL. Furthermore, similar microfluorimetric calcium responses of sensory neurons and expression of itch-related TRP channels suggest no change in sensory transduction but in action potential transformation and conduction. The cumulative sum of scratching over all pruritogens confirmed a leading role of Na1.7 and indicated an overall contribution of Na1.9. Beside the proposed general role of Na1.7 and 1.9 in itch signalling, scrutiny of time courses suggested Na1.8 to sustain prolonged itching. Therefore, Na1.7 and 1.9 may represent targets in pruritus therapy.