Emery Edward C, Habib Abdella M, Cox James J, Nicholas Adeline K, Gribble Fiona M, Woods C Geoffrey, Reimann Frank
University of Cambridge, Wellcome Trust/MRC Institute for Metabolic Science, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, CB2 0QQ, United Kingdom.
University College London, Molecular Nociception Group, London, WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom, and.
J Neurosci. 2015 May 20;35(20):7674-81. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3935-14.2015.
The importance of NaV1.7 (encoded by SCN9A) in the regulation of pain sensing is exemplified by the heterogeneity of clinical phenotypes associated with its mutation. Gain-of-function mutations are typically pain-causing and have been associated with inherited erythromelalgia (IEM) and paroxysmal extreme pain disorder (PEPD). IEM is usually caused by enhanced NaV1.7 channel activation, whereas mutations that alter steady-state fast inactivation often lead to PEPD. In contrast, nonfunctional mutations in SCN9A are known to underlie congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP). Although well documented, the correlation between SCN9A genotypes and clinical phenotypes is still unclear. Here we report three families with novel SCN9A mutations. In a multiaffected dominant family with IEM, we found the heterozygous change L245 V. Electrophysiological characterization showed that this mutation did not affect channel activation but instead resulted in incomplete fast inactivation and a small hyperpolarizing shift in steady-state slow inactivation, characteristics more commonly associated with PEPD. In two compound heterozygous CIP patients, we found mutations that still retained functionality of the channels, with two C-terminal mutations (W1775R and L1831X) exhibiting a depolarizing shift in channel activation. Two mutations (A1236E and L1831X) resulted in a hyperpolarizing shift in steady-state fast inactivation. To our knowledge, these are the first descriptions of mutations with some retained channel function causing CIP. This study emphasizes the complex genotype-phenotype correlations that exist for SCN9A and highlights the C-terminal cytoplasmic region of NaV1.7 as a critical region for channel function, potentially facilitating analgesic drug development studies.
NaV1.7(由SCN9A编码)在疼痛感知调节中的重要性体现在与其突变相关的临床表型的异质性上。功能获得性突变通常会导致疼痛,与遗传性红斑性肢痛症(IEM)和阵发性极端疼痛障碍(PEPD)相关。IEM通常由增强的NaV1.7通道激活引起,而改变稳态快速失活的突变往往导致PEPD。相比之下,已知SCN9A中的无功能突变是先天性无痛觉(CIP)的基础。尽管有充分的文献记载,但SCN9A基因型与临床表型之间的相关性仍不清楚。在这里,我们报告了三个携带新型SCN9A突变的家系。在一个患有IEM的多患者显性家系中,我们发现了杂合变化L245V。电生理特征表明,该突变不影响通道激活,但导致不完全快速失活和稳态缓慢失活的小超极化偏移,这些特征更常与PEPD相关。在两名复合杂合CIP患者中,我们发现了仍保留通道功能的突变,两个C末端突变(W1775R和L1831X)在通道激活时表现出去极化偏移。两个突变(A1236E和L1831X)导致稳态快速失活出现超极化偏移。据我们所知,这些是首次描述具有一些保留通道功能的突变导致CIP。这项研究强调了SCN9A存在的复杂基因型-表型相关性,并突出了NaV1.7的C末端胞质区域作为通道功能的关键区域,可能有助于镇痛药开发研究。