Department of Anesthesiology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, USA Center for Human Genetics Research, Department of Molecular Physiology & Biophysics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, USA.
Pain. 2013 Dec;154(12):2853-2859. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2013.08.026. Epub 2013 Aug 28.
G-protein coupled inwardly rectifying potassium (GIRK) channels are effectors determining degree of analgesia experienced upon opioid receptor activation by endogenous and exogenous opioids. The impact of GIRK-related genetic variation on human pain responses has received little research attention. We used a tag single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) approach to comprehensively examine pain-related effects of KCNJ3 (GIRK1) and KCNJ6 (GIRK2) gene variation. Forty-one KCNJ3 and 69 KCNJ6 tag SNPs were selected, capturing the known variability in each gene. The primary sample included 311 white patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty in whom postsurgical oral opioid analgesic medication order data were available. Primary sample findings were then replicated in an independent white sample of 63 healthy pain-free individuals and 75 individuals with chronic low back pain (CLBP) who provided data regarding laboratory acute pain responsiveness (ischemic task) and chronic pain intensity and unpleasantness (CLBP only). Univariate quantitative trait analyses in the primary sample revealed that 8 KCNJ6 SNPs were significantly associated with the medication order phenotype (P < .05); overall effects of the KCNJ6 gene (gene set-based analysis) just failed to reach significance (P = .054). No significant KCNJ3 effects were observed. A continuous GIRK Related Risk Score (GRRS) was derived in the primary sample to summarize each individual's number of KCNJ6 "pain risk" alleles. This GRRS was applied to the replication sample, which revealed significant associations (P < .05) between higher GRRS values and lower acute pain tolerance and higher CLBP intensity and unpleasantness. Results suggest further exploration of the impact of KCNJ6 genetic variation on pain outcomes is warranted.
G 蛋白偶联内向整流钾 (GIRK) 通道是决定内源性和外源性阿片受体激活后镇痛程度的效应器。GIRK 相关遗传变异对人类疼痛反应的影响尚未得到广泛关注。我们使用标签单核苷酸多态性 (SNP) 方法全面研究 KCNJ3(GIRK1)和 KCNJ6(GIRK2)基因变异与疼痛相关的影响。选择了 41 个 KCNJ3 和 69 个 KCNJ6 标签 SNP,捕获了每个基因的已知变异性。主要样本包括 311 名白人患者,他们接受了全膝关节置换术,其中有术后口服阿片类镇痛药医嘱数据。主要样本的发现随后在一个独立的白人样本中得到了复制,该样本包括 63 名健康无痛个体和 75 名慢性下背痛 (CLBP) 个体,这些个体提供了关于实验室急性疼痛反应性 (缺血性任务) 和慢性疼痛强度和不适 (仅 CLBP) 的数据。主要样本中的单变量数量性状分析显示,8 个 KCNJ6 SNP 与药物医嘱表型显著相关 (P <.05);KCNJ6 基因的总体效应 (基于基因集的分析) 刚刚达不到显著水平 (P =.054)。未观察到 KCNJ3 效应的显著影响。在主要样本中,我们推导了一个连续的 GIRK 相关风险评分 (GRRS),以总结每个个体的 KCNJ6“疼痛风险”等位基因数量。该 GRRS 应用于复制样本,结果显示较高的 GRRS 值与较低的急性疼痛耐受力以及较高的 CLBP 强度和不适显著相关 (P <.05)。结果表明,有必要进一步探索 KCNJ6 遗传变异对疼痛结局的影响。