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Papers of the Week


Papers: 3 Apr 2021 - 9 Apr 2021


Animal Studies


2021 Mar 31


Neuron

Editor's Pick

A central mechanism of analgesia in mice and humans lacking the sodium channel Na1.7.

Authors

MacDonald D I, Sikandar S, Weiss J, Pyrski M, Luiz AP, Millet Q, Emery EC, Mancini F, Iannetti GD, Alles SRA, Arcangeletti M, Zhao J, Cox JJ, Brownstone RM, Zufall F, Wood JN
Neuron. 2021 Mar 31.
PMID: 33823138.

Abstract

Deletion of SCN9A encoding the voltage-gated sodium channel Na1.7 in humans leads to profound pain insensitivity and anosmia. Conditional deletion of Na1.7 in sensory neurons of mice also abolishes pain, suggesting that the locus of analgesia is the nociceptor. Here we demonstrate, using in vivo calcium imaging and extracellular recording, that Na1.7 knockout mice have essentially normal nociceptor activity. However, synaptic transmission from nociceptor central terminals in the spinal cord is greatly reduced by an opioid-dependent mechanism. Analgesia is also reversed substantially by central but not peripheral application of opioid antagonists. In contrast, the lack of neurotransmitter release from olfactory sensory neurons is opioid independent. Male and female humans with Na1.7-null mutations show naloxone-reversible analgesia. Thus, inhibition of neurotransmitter release is the principal mechanism of anosmia and analgesia in mouse and human Nav1.7-null mutants.