4.6 Article

Genetic mapping in Diversity Outbred mice identifies a Trpa1 variant influencing late-phase formalin response

Journal

PAIN
Volume 160, Issue 8, Pages 1740-1753

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000001571

Keywords

Pain genetics; Formalin; Chronic pain; Inflammatory nociception; Diversity Outbred mice; Genetic linkage mapping

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Defense (DOD)
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH)
  3. DOD [W81XWH-11-1-0762]
  4. NIH [P30 CA034196, R01 AA 18776, R01DA37927]

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Identification of genetic variants that influence susceptibility to pain is key to identifying molecular mechanisms and targets for effective and safe therapeutic alternatives to opioids. To identify genes and variants associated with persistent pain, we measured late-phase response to formalin injection in 275 male and female Diversity Outbred mice genotyped for over 70,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms. One quantitative trait locus reached genome-wide significance on chromosome 1 with a support interval of 3.1 Mb. This locus, Nociq4 (nociceptive sensitivity quantitative trait locus 4; MGI: 5661503), harbors the well-known pain gene Trpa1 (transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily A, member 1). Trpa1 is a cation channel known to play an important role in acute and chronic pain in both humans and mice. Analysis of Diversity Outbred founder strain allele effects revealed a significant effect of the CAST/EiJ allele at Trpa1, with CAST/EiJ carrier mice showing an early, but not late, response to formalin relative to carriers of the 7 other inbred founder alleles (A/J, C57BU6J, 129S1/SvlmJ, NOD/ShiLtJ, NZO/HILtJ, PWK/PhJ, and WSB/EiJ). We characterized possible functional consequences of sequence variants in Trpal by assessing channel conductance, TRPA1-TRPV1 interactions, and isoform expression. The phenotypic differences observed in CAST/EiJ relative to C57BL/6J carriers were best explained by Trpa1 isoform expression differences, implicating a splice junction variant as the causal functional variant. This study demonstrates the utility of advanced, high-precision genetic mapping populations in resolving specific molecular mechanisms of variation in pain sensitivity.

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