Cummins Theodore R, Sheets Patrick L, Waxman Stephen G
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Stark Neurosciences Research Institute, Indiana University School of Medicine, 950 West Walnut Street, R2 468, Indianapolis, IN 46202, United States Department of Neurology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06510, United States Center for Neuroscience and Regeneration Research, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06510, United States Rehabilitation Research Center, Veterans Administration Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, CT 06516, United States.
Pain. 2007 Oct;131(3):243-257. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2007.07.026. Epub 2007 Sep 4.
Understanding the role of voltage-gated sodium channels in nociception may provide important insights into pain mechanisms. Voltage-gated sodium channels are critically important for electrogenesis and nerve impulse conduction, and a target for important clinically relevant analgesics such as lidocaine. Furthermore, within the last decade studies have shown that certain sodium channel isoforms are predominantly expressed in peripheral sensory neurons associated with pain sensation, and that the expression and functional properties of voltage-gated sodium channels in peripheral sensory neurons can be dynamically regulated following axonal injury or peripheral inflammation. These data suggest that specific voltage-gated sodium channels may play crucial roles in nociception. Experiments with transgenic mice lines have clearly implicated Na(v)1.7, Na(v)1.8 and Na(v)1.9 in inflammatory, and possibly neuropathic, pain. However the most convincing and perhaps most exciting results regarding the role of voltage-gated sodium channels have come out recently from studies on human inherited disorders of nociception. Point mutations in Na(v)1.7 have been identified in patients with two distinct autosomal dominant severe chronic pain syndromes. Electrophysiological experiments indicate that these pain-associated mutations cause small yet significant changes in the gating properties of voltage-gated sodium channels that are likely to contribute substantially to the development of chronic pain. Equally exciting, recent studies indicate that recessive mutations in Na(v)1.7 that eliminate functional current can result in an apparent complete, and possibly specific, indifference to pain in humans, suggesting that isoform specific blockers could be very effective in treating pain. In this review we will examine what is known about the roles of voltage-gated sodium channels in nociception.
了解电压门控钠通道在伤害感受中的作用,可能为疼痛机制提供重要见解。电压门控钠通道对电发生和神经冲动传导至关重要,并且是利多卡因等重要临床相关镇痛药的作用靶点。此外,在过去十年中,研究表明某些钠通道亚型主要在外周与痛觉相关的感觉神经元中表达,并且轴突损伤或外周炎症后,外周感觉神经元中电压门控钠通道的表达和功能特性可被动态调节。这些数据表明特定的电压门控钠通道可能在伤害感受中起关键作用。对转基因小鼠品系的实验已明确表明,Na(v)1.7、Na(v)1.8和Na(v)1.9与炎症性疼痛以及可能的神经性疼痛有关。然而,关于电压门控钠通道作用的最有说服力且可能最令人兴奋的结果,最近来自对人类遗传性伤害感受障碍的研究。在患有两种不同常染色体显性严重慢性疼痛综合征的患者中,已鉴定出Na(v)1.7的点突变。电生理实验表明,这些与疼痛相关的突变会导致电压门控钠通道门控特性发生微小但显著的变化,这可能在很大程度上促成慢性疼痛的发展。同样令人兴奋的是,最近的研究表明,消除功能性电流的Na(v)1.7隐性突变可导致人类对疼痛明显完全且可能具有特异性的无反应,这表明亚型特异性阻滞剂可能在治疗疼痛方面非常有效。在这篇综述中,我们将探讨关于电压门控钠通道在伤害感受中的作用的已知情况。