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Letters to Nature
Nature 379, 257-262 (18 January 1996) | doi:10.1038/379257a0; Accepted 9 November 1995
A tetrodotoxin-resistant voltage-gated sodium channel expressed by sensory neurons
Armen N. Akopian, Lucia Sivilotti* & John N. Wood†
- Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, and * Department of Pharmacology, University College, London WC1E 6BT, UK
- † To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
DORSAL root ganglion sensory neurons associated with C-fibres, many of which are activated by tissue-damage, express an unusual voltage-gated sodium channel that is resistant to tetrodotoxin1–9. We report here that we have identified a 1,957 amino-acid sodium channel in these cells that shows 65% identity with the rat cardiac tetrodotoxin-insensitive sodium channel10, and is not expressed in other peripheral and central neurons, glia or non-neuronal tissues. In situ hybridization shows that the channel is expressed only by small-diameter sensory neurons in neonatal and adult dorsal root and trigeminal ganglia. The channel is resistant to tetrodotoxin when expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The electrophysiological and pharmacological properties of the expressed channel are similar to those described for the small-diameter sensory neuron tetrodotoxin-resistant sodium channels. As some noxious input into the spinal cord is resistant to tetrodotoxin8,11,12, block of expression or function of such a C-fibre-restricted sodium channel may have a selective analgesic effect.
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