Publication: Altered potassium channel distribution and composition in myelinated axons suppresses hyperexcitability following injury.
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Identifiers
Date
2016-04-01
Authors
Calvo, Margarita
Richards, Natalie
Schmid, Annina B
Barroso, Alejandro
Zhu, Lan
Ivulic, Dinka
Zhu, Ning
Anwandter, Philipp
Bhat, Manzoor A
Court, Felipe A
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications
Abstract
Neuropathic pain following peripheral nerve injury is associated with hyperexcitability in damaged myelinated sensory axons, which begins to normalise over time. We investigated the composition and distribution of shaker-type-potassium channels (Kv1 channels) within the nodal complex of myelinated axons following injury. At the neuroma that forms after damage, expression of Kv1.1 and 1.2 (normally localised to the juxtaparanode) was markedly decreased. In contrast Kv1.4 and 1.6, which were hardly detectable in the naïve state, showed increased expression within juxtaparanodes and paranodes following injury, both in rats and humans. Within the dorsal root (a site remote from injury) we noted a redistribution of Kv1-channels towards the paranode. Blockade of Kv1 channels with α-DTX after injury reinstated hyperexcitability of A-fibre axons and enhanced mechanosensitivity. Changes in the molecular composition and distribution of axonal Kv1 channels, therefore represents a protective mechanism to suppress the hyperexcitability of myelinated sensory axons that follows nerve injury.
Description
MeSH Terms
Action Potentials
Animals
Axons
Humans
Peripheral Nerve Injuries
Rats
Shaker Superfamily of Potassium Channels
Animals
Axons
Humans
Peripheral Nerve Injuries
Rats
Shaker Superfamily of Potassium Channels
DeCS Terms
Axones
Raíces nerviosas espinales
Neuralgia
Canales de potasio
Traumatismos de los nervios periféricos
Neuroma
Raíces nerviosas espinales
Neuralgia
Canales de potasio
Traumatismos de los nervios periféricos
Neuroma
CIE Terms
Keywords
Human, Hypersensitivity, Juxtaparanode, Neuropathic pain, Neuropathy, Neuroscience, Rat, Shaker type potassium channels
Citation
Calvo M, Richards N, Schmid AB, Barroso A, Zhu L, Ivulic D, et al. Altered potassium channel distribution and composition in myelinated axons suppresses hyperexcitability following injury. Elife. 2016 Apr 19;5:e12661