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THE ROLE OF VOLTAGE-GATED SODIUM CHANNELS IN PAIN SIGNALING

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 99, Issue 2, Pages 1079-1151

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/physrev.00052.2017

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Funding

  1. Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking [115439]
  2. European Union
  3. Rehabilitation Research and Development Service [B9253-C, B0395-R]
  4. Biomedical Laboratory Research and Development Service, Department of Veterans Affairs [CC103]
  5. Erythromelalgia Association
  6. Taylor Foundation
  7. BBSRC [BB/S006788/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Acute pain signaling has a key protective role and is highly evolutionarily conserved. Chronic pain, however, is maladaptive, occurring as a consequence of injury and disease, and is associated with sensitization of the somatosensory nervous system. Primary sensory neurons are involved in both of these processes, and the recent advances in understanding sensory transduction and human genetics are the focus of this review. Voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs) are important determinants of sensory neuron excitability: they are essential for the initial transduction of sensory stimuli, the electrogenesis of the action potential, and neurotransmitter release from sensory neuron terminals. Na(v)1.1, Na(v)1.6, Na(v)1.7, Na(v)1.8, and Na(v)1.9 are all expressed by adult sensory neurons. The biophysical characteristics of these channels, as well as their unique expression patterns within subtypes of sensory neurons, define their functional role in pain signaling. Changes in the expression of VGSCs, as well as posttranslational modifications, contribute to the sensitization of sensory neurons in chronic pain states. Furthermore, gene variants in Na(v)1.7, Na(v)1.8, and Na(v)1.9 have now been linked to human Mendelian pain disorders and more recently to common pain disorders such as small-fiber neuropathy. Chronic pain affects one in five of the general population. Given the poor efficacy of current analgesics, the selective expression of particular VGSCs in sensory neurons makes these attractive targets for drug discovery. The increasing availability of gene sequencing, combined with structural modeling and electrophysiological analysis of gene variants, also provides the opportunity to better target existing therapies in a personalized manner.

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