Lampert A

Universidade Federal de Ciências da Saúde de Porto Alegre

20
EM Publications
39
h-index
(4,738 citations, 210 total works)

Research Topics

Ion channel regulation and function (86) Pain Mechanisms and Treatments (56) Cardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmias (33) Neuroscience and Neural Engineering (29) Neuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research (22)

Erythromelalgia Publications

Spontaneous activity in pain patient stem cell-derived sensory neurons arises from one functional subclass.

Eberhardt E, Namer B, Neureiter A, Körner J, Jørum E , et al.
Pain

Spontaneous activity of peripheral sensory nerve fibers is one of the main drivers of neuropathic pain. It can be assessed in microneurography recordings of patients' C fibers and in patch-clamp recordings of dissociated dorsal root ganglia from humans and rodents. In microneurography of human C fibers, a distinct subgroup of neurons, the so-called mechano-insensitive (CMi) or sleeping nociceptors, shows spontaneous activity during neuropathic pain. It was shown before that sensory neurons from patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iSNs) can be used to model this increased spontaneous activity in vitro, suggesting that a disease relevant cell type is generated with this approach. The origin of the spontaneous activity in human C fibers is not fully understood. Derived sensory neurons offer the unique possibility to study patient-derived, single-cell function, allowing for identification of potential mechanisms underlying spontaneous C-fiber activity. Here, we identify 4 distinct functional subtypes of iSNs from healthy donors and a patient suffering from the neuropathic pain syndrome inherited erythromelalgia using patch-clamp recordings. Similar to microneurography recordings from the same patient, spontaneous activity is restricted to 1 functional subgroup that shows tonic firing behavior and seems to be especially prone to develop neuronal hyperexcitability. We demonstrate that spontaneous activity correlates with a reduced voltage threshold of action potential generation and increased spontaneous depolarizing fluctuations of the membrane potential. Our findings reveal that only the tonically firing functional subclass of iSNs shows spontaneous activity and suggest that these neurons may be related to the pathologically active CMi fibers identified during microneurography recordings in patients with pain.

Analgesic effect of Botulinum toxin in neuropathic pain is sodium channel independent.

Kesdoğan AB, Neureiter A, Gaebler AJ, Kalia AK, Körner J , et al.
Neuropharmacology

Botulinum neurotoxin type A BoNT/A is used off-label as a third line therapy for neuropathic pain. However, the mechanism of action remains unclear. In recent years, the role of voltage-gated sodium channels (Nav) in neuropathic pain became evident and it was suggested that block of sodium channels by BoNT/A would contribute to its analgesic effect. We assessed sodium channel function in the presence of BoNT/A in heterologously expressed Nav1.7, Nav1.3, and the neuronal cell line ND7/23 by high throughput automated and manual patch-clamp. We used both the full protein and the isolated catalytic light chain LC/A for acute or long-term extracellular or intracellular exposure. To assess the toxin's effect in a human cellular system, we differentiated induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) into sensory neurons from a healthy control and a patient suffering from a hereditary neuropathic pain syndrome (inherited erythromelalgia) carrying the Nav1.7/p.Q875E-mutation and carried out multielectrode-array measurements. Both BoNT/A and the isolated catalytic light chain LC/A showed limited effects in heterologous expression systems and the neuronal cell line ND7/23. Spontaneous activity in iPSC derived sensory neurons remained unaltered upon BoNT/A exposure both in neurons from the healthy control and the mutation carrying patient. BoNT/A may not specifically be beneficial in pain syndromes linked to sodium channel variants. The favorable effects of BoNT/A in neuropathic pain are likely based on mechanisms other than sodium channel blockage and new approaches to understand BoNT/A's therapeutic effects are necessary.

Cold and warmth intensify pain-linked sodium channel gating effects and persistent currents.

Kriegeskorte S, Bott R, Hampl M, Korngreen A, Hausmann R , et al.
The Journal of general physiology

Voltage-gated sodium channels (Nav) are key players in excitable tissues with the capability to generate and propagate action potentials. Mutations in the genes encoding Navs can lead to severe inherited diseases, and some of these so-called channelopathies show temperature-sensitive phenotypes, for example, paramyotonia congenita, Brugada syndrome, febrile seizure syndromes, and inherited pain syndromes like erythromelalgia (IEM) and paroxysmal extreme pain disorder (PEPD). Nevertheless, most investigations of mutation-induced gating effects have been conducted at room temperature, and thus the role of cooling or warming in channelopathies remains poorly understood. Here, we investigated the temperature sensitivity of four Nav subtypes: Nav1.3, Nav1.5, Nav1.6, and Nav1.7, and two mutations in Nav1.7 causing IEM (Nav1.7/L823R) and PEPD (Nav1.7/I1461T) expressed in cells of the human embryonic kidney cell line using an automated patch clamp system. Our experiments at 15°C, 25°C, and 35°C revealed a shift of the voltage dependence of activation to more hyperpolarized potentials with increasing temperature for all investigated subtypes. Nav1.3 exhibited strongly slowed inactivation kinetics compared with the other subtypes that resulted in enhanced persistent current, especially at 15°C, indicating a possible role in cold-induced hyperexcitability. Impaired fast inactivation of Nav1.7/I1461T was significantly enhanced by a cooling temperature of 15°C. The subtype-specific modulation as well as the intensified mutation-induced gating changes stress the importance to consider temperature as a regulator for channel gating and its impact on cellular excitability as well as disease phenotypes.

Assessing the impact of pain-linked Nav1.7 variants: An example of two variants with no biophysical effect.

Le Cann K, Meents JE, Sudha Bhagavath Eswaran V, Dohrn MF, Bott R , et al.
Channels (Austin, Tex.)

Mutations in the voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7 are linked to human pain. The Nav1.7/N1245S variant was described before in several patients suffering from primary erythromelalgia and/or olfactory hypersensitivity. We have identified this variant in a pain patient and a patient suffering from severe and life-threatening orthostatic hypotension. In addition, we report a female patient suffering from muscle pain and carrying the Nav1.7/E1139K variant. We tested both Nav1.7 variants by whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings in HEK293 cells, revealing a slightly enhanced current density for the N1245S variant when co-expressed with the β1 subunit. This effect was counteracted by an enhanced slow inactivation. Both variants showed similar voltage dependence of activation and steady-state fast inactivation, as well as kinetics of fast inactivation, deactivation, and use-dependency compared to WT Nav1.7. Finally, homology modeling revealed that the N1245S substitution results in different intramolecular interaction partners. Taken together, these experiments do not point to a clear pathogenic effect of either the N1245S or E1139K variant and suggest they may not be solely responsible for the patients' pain symptoms. As discussed previously for other variants, investigations in heterologous expression systems may not sufficiently mimic the pathophysiological situation in pain patients, and single nucleotide variants in other genes or modulatory proteins are necessary for these specific variants to show their effect. Our findings stress that biophysical investigations of ion channel mutations need to be evaluated with care and should preferably be supplemented with studies investigating the mutations in their context, ideally in human sensory neurons.

Phosphorylation of a chronic pain mutation in the voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7 increases voltage sensitivity.

Kerth CM, Hautvast P, Körner J, Lampert A, Meents JE
The Journal of biological chemistry

Mutations in voltage-gated sodium channels (Navs) can cause alterations in pain sensation, such as chronic pain diseases like inherited erythromelalgia. The mutation causing inherited erythromelalgia, Nav1.7 p.I848T, is known to induce a hyperpolarized shift in the voltage dependence of activation in Nav1.7. So far, however, the mechanism to explain this increase in voltage sensitivity remains unknown. In the present study, we show that phosphorylation of the newly introduced Thr residue explains the functional change. We expressed wildtype human Nav1.7, the I848T mutant, or other mutations in HEK293T cells and performed whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology. As the insertion of a Thr residue potentially creates a novel phosphorylation site for Ser/Thr kinases and because Nav1.7 had been shown in Xenopus oocytes to be affected by protein kinases C and A, we used different nonselective and selective kinase inhibitors and activators to test the effect of phosphorylation on Nav1.7 in a human system. We identify protein kinase C, but not protein kinase A, to be responsible for the phosphorylation of T848 and thereby for the shift in voltage sensitivity. Introducing a negatively charged amino acid instead of the putative phosphorylation site mimics the effect on voltage gating to a lesser extent. 3D modeling using the published cryo-EM structure of human Nav1.7 showed that introduction of this negatively charged site seems to alter the interaction of this residue with the surrounding amino acids and thus to influence channel function. These results could provide new opportunities for the development of novel treatment options for patients with chronic pain.

Uncoupling sodium channel dimers restores the phenotype of a pain-linked Na 1.7 channel mutation.

Rühlmann AH, Körner J, Hausmann R, Bebrivenski N, Neuhof C , et al.
British journal of pharmacology

The voltage-gated sodium channel Na 1.7 is essential for adequate perception of painful stimuli. Mutations in the encoding gene, SCN9A, cause various pain syndromes in humans. The hNa 1.7/A1632E channel mutant causes symptoms of erythromelalgia and paroxysmal extreme pain disorder (PEPD), and its main gating change is a strongly enhanced persistent current. On the basis of recently published 3D structures of voltage-gated sodium channels, we investigated how the inactivation particle binds to the channel, how this mechanism is altered by the hNa 1.7/A1632E mutation, and how dimerization modifies function of the pain-linked mutation. We applied atomistic molecular simulations to demonstrate the effect of the mutation on channel fast inactivation. Native PAGE was used to demonstrate channel dimerization, and electrophysiological measurements in HEK cells and Xenopus laevis oocytes were used to analyze the links between functional channel dimerization and impairment of fast inactivation by the hNa 1.7/A1632E mutation. Enhanced persistent current through hNa 1.7/A1632E channels was caused by impaired binding of the inactivation particle, which inhibits proper functioning of the recently proposed allosteric fast inactivation mechanism. hNa 1.7 channels form dimers and the disease-associated persistent current through hNa 1.7/A1632E channels depends on their functional dimerization status: Expression of the synthetic peptide difopein, a 14-3-3 inhibitor known to functionally uncouple dimers, decreased hNa 1.7/A1632E channel-induced persistent currents. Functional uncoupling of mutant hNa 1.7/A1632E channel dimers restored their defective allosteric fast inactivation mechanism. Our findings support the concept of sodium channel dimerization and reveal its potential relevance for human pain syndromes.

The role of Nav1.7 in human nociceptors: insights from human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived sensory neurons of erythromelalgia patients.

Meents JE, Bressan E, Sontag S, Foerster A, Hautvast P , et al.
Pain

The chronic pain syndrome inherited erythromelalgia (IEM) is attributed to mutations in the voltage-gated sodium channel (NaV) 1.7. Still, recent studies targeting NaV1.7 in clinical trials have provided conflicting results. Here, we differentiated induced pluripotent stem cells from IEM patients with the NaV1.7/I848T mutation into sensory nociceptors. Action potentials in these IEM nociceptors displayed a decreased firing threshold, an enhanced upstroke, and afterhyperpolarization, all of which may explain the increased pain experienced by patients. Subsequently, we investigated the voltage dependence of the tetrodotoxin-sensitive NaV activation in these human sensory neurons using a specific prepulse voltage protocol. The IEM mutation induced a hyperpolarizing shift of NaV activation, which leads to activation of NaV1.7 at more negative potentials. Our results indicate that NaV1.7 is not active during subthreshold depolarizations, but that its activity defines the action potential threshold and contributes significantly to the action potential upstroke. Thus, our model system with induced pluripotent stem cell-derived sensory neurons provides a new rationale for NaV1.7 function and promises to be valuable as a translational tool to profile and develop more efficacious clinical analgesics.

[Neuropathic pain syndromes and channelopathies].

Dohrn MF, Lampert A, Üçeyler N, Kurth I
Der Internist

The causes for neuropathic pain are manifold and remain unexplained in the majority of cases. In recent years a growing number of pain syndromes have been attributed to mutations in genes encoding voltage-gated sodium channels. Hence, this group of rare diseases should be considered in the differential diagnostics of neuropathic pain. Evaluation of topic-related literature and discussion of own experiences as well as consideration of current guidelines. Alterations in the electrical excitability of nociceptive neurons by pathogenic mutations in sodium channels lead to disease patterns, such as small fiber neuropathy and various pain syndromes. This article summarizes the knowledge on these genetic diseases and discusses the differential diagnosis of neuropathic pain. Current treatment concepts are presented and the predominantly experimental approaches to targeted modulation of sodium channels are discussed. The treatment of patients with chronic neuropathic pain requires interdisciplinary cooperation and is often difficult due to an unsatisfactory treatment response. Increasing knowledge on rare genetically determined channelopathies can contribute to the development of novel pharmaceuticals since ion channels are central players in the processing of pain.

Translational Model Systems for Complex Sodium Channel Pathophysiology in Pain.

Schrenk-Siemens K, Rösseler C, Lampert A
Handbook of experimental pharmacology

Chronic pain patients are often left with insufficient treatment as the pathophysiology especially of neuropathic pain remains enigmatic. Recently, genetic variations in the genes of the voltage-gated sodium channels (Navs) were linked to inherited neuropathic pain syndromes, opening a research pathway to foster our understanding of the pathophysiology of neuropathic pain. More than 10 years ago, the rare, inherited pain syndrome erythromelalgia was linked to mutations in the subtype Nav1.7, and since then a plethora of mutations and genetic variations in this and other Nav genes were identified. Often the biophysical changes induced by the genetic alteration offer a straightforward explanation for the clinical symptoms, but mutations in some channels, especially Nav1.9, paint a more complex picture. Although efforts were undertaken to significantly advance our knowledge, translation from heterologous or animal model systems to humans remains a challenge. Here we present recent advances in translation using stem cell-derived human sensory neurons and their potential application for identification of better, effective, and more precise treatment for the individual pain patient.

Sodium channel slow inactivation interferes with open channel block.

Hampl M, Eberhardt E, O'Reilly AO, Lampert A
Scientific reports

Mutations in the voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7 are linked to inherited pain syndromes such as erythromelalgia (IEM) and paroxysmal extreme pain disorder (PEPD). PEPD mutations impair Nav1.7 fast inactivation and increase persistent currents. PEPD mutations also increase resurgent currents, which involve the voltage-dependent release of an open channel blocker. In contrast, IEM mutations, whenever tested, leave resurgent currents unchanged. Accordingly, the IEM deletion mutation L955 (ΔL955) fails to produce resurgent currents despite enhanced persistent currents, which have hitherto been considered a prerequisite for resurgent currents. Additionally, ΔL955 exhibits a prominent enhancement of slow inactivation (SI). We introduced mutations into Nav1.7 and Nav1.6 that either enhance or impair SI in order to investigate their effects on resurgent currents. Our results show that enhanced SI is accompanied by impaired resurgent currents, which suggests that SI may interfere with open-channel block.

SCN10A Mutation in a Patient with Erythromelalgia Enhances C-Fiber Activity Dependent Slowing.

Kist AM, Sagafos D, Rush AM, Neacsu C, Eberhardt E , et al.
PloS one

Gain-of-function mutations in the tetrodotoxin (TTX) sensitive voltage-gated sodium channel (Nav) Nav1.7 have been identified as a key mechanism underlying chronic pain in inherited erythromelalgia. Mutations in TTX resistant channels, such as Nav1.8 or Nav1.9, were recently connected with inherited chronic pain syndromes. Here, we investigated the effects of the p.M650K mutation in Nav1.8 in a 53 year old patient with erythromelalgia by microneurography and patch-clamp techniques. Recordings of the patient's peripheral nerve fibers showed increased activity dependent slowing (ADS) in CMi and less spontaneous firing compared to a control group of erythromelalgia patients without Nav mutations. To evaluate the impact of the p.M650K mutation on neuronal firing and channel gating, we performed current and voltage-clamp recordings on transfected sensory neurons (DRGs) and neuroblastoma cells. The p.M650K mutation shifted steady-state fast inactivation of Nav1.8 to more hyperpolarized potentials and did not significantly alter any other tested gating behaviors. The AP half-width was significantly broader and the stimulated action potential firing rate was reduced for M650K transfected DRGs compared to WT. We discuss the potential link between enhanced steady state fast inactivation, broader action potential width and the potential physiological consequences.

Erythromelalgia mutation Q875E Stabilizes the activated state of sodium channel Nav1.7.

Stadler T, O'Reilly AO, Lampert A
The Journal of biological chemistry

The human voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7 plays a crucial role in transmission of noxious stimuli. The inherited pain disorder erythromelalgia (IEM) has been linked to Nav1.7 gain-of-function mutations. Here we show that the IEM-associated Q875E mutation located on the pore module of Nav1.7 produces a large hyperpolarizing shift (-18 mV) in the voltage dependence of activation. Three-dimensional homology modeling indicates that the side chains of Gln-875 and the gating charge Arg-214 of the domain I voltage sensor are spatially close in the activated conformation of the channel. We verified this proximity by using an engineered disulfide bridge approach. The Q875E mutation introduces a negative charge that may modify the local electrical field experienced by the voltage sensor and, upon activation, interact directly via a salt bridge with the Arg-214 gating charge residue. Together these processes could promote transition to, and stabilization of, the domain I voltage sensor in the activated conformation and thus produce the observed gain of function. In support of this hypothesis, an increase in the extracellular concentration of Ca(2+) or Mg(2+) reverted the voltage dependence of activation of the IEM mutant to near WT values, suggesting a cation-mediated electrostatic screening of the proposed interaction between Q875E and Arg-214.

Inherited pain: sodium channel Nav1.7 A1632T mutation causes erythromelalgia due to a shift of fast inactivation.

Eberhardt M, Nakajima J, Klinger AB, Neacsu C, Hühne K , et al.
The Journal of biological chemistry

Inherited erythromelalgia (IEM) causes debilitating episodic neuropathic pain characterized by burning in the extremities. Inherited "paroxysmal extreme pain disorder" (PEPD) differs in its clinical picture and affects proximal body areas like the rectal, ocular, or jaw regions. Both pain syndromes have been linked to mutations in the voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7. Electrophysiological characterization shows that IEM-causing mutations generally enhance activation, whereas mutations leading to PEPD alter fast inactivation. Previously, an A1632E mutation of a patient with overlapping symptoms of IEM and PEPD was reported (Estacion, M., Dib-Hajj, S. D., Benke, P. J., Te Morsche, R. H., Eastman, E. M., Macala, L. J., Drenth, J. P., and Waxman, S. G. (2008) NaV1.7 Gain-of-function mutations as a continuum. A1632E displays physiological changes associated with erythromelalgia and paroxysmal extreme pain disorder mutations and produces symptoms of both disorders. J. Neurosci. 28, 11079-11088), displaying a shift of both activation and fast inactivation. Here, we characterize a new mutation of Nav1.7, A1632T, found in a patient suffering from IEM. Although transfection of A1632T in sensory neurons resulted in hyperexcitability and spontaneous firing of dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons, whole-cell patch clamp of transfected HEK cells revealed that Nav1.7 activation was unaltered by the A1632T mutation but that steady-state fast inactivation was shifted to more depolarized potentials. This is a characteristic normally attributed to PEPD-causing mutations. In contrast to the IEM/PEPD crossover mutation A1632E, A1632T failed to slow current decay (i.e. open-state inactivation) and did not increase resurgent currents, which have been suggested to contribute to high-frequency firing in physiological and pathological conditions. Reduced fast inactivation without increased resurgent currents induces symptoms of IEM, not PEPD, in the new Nav1.7 mutation, A1632T. Therefore, persistent and resurgent currents are likely to determine whether a mutation in Nav1.7 leads to IEM or PEPD.

Differential axonal conduction patterns of mechano-sensitive and mechano-insensitive nociceptors--a combined experimental and modelling study.

Petersson ME, Obreja O, Lampert A, Carr RW, Schmelz M , et al.
PloS one

Cutaneous pain sensations are mediated largely by C-nociceptors consisting of both mechano-sensitive (CM) and mechano-insensitive (CMi) fibres that can be distinguished from one another according to their characteristic axonal properties. In healthy skin and relative to CMi fibres, CM fibres show a higher initial conduction velocity, less activity-dependent conduction velocity slowing, and less prominent post-spike supernormality. However, after sensitization with nerve growth factor, the electrical signature of CMi fibres changes towards a profile similar to that of CM fibres. Here we take a combined experimental and modelling approach to examine the molecular basis of such alterations to the excitation thresholds. Changes in electrical activation thresholds and activity-dependent slowing were examined in vivo using single-fibre recordings of CM and CMi fibres in domestic pigs following NGF application. Using computational modelling, we investigated which axonal mechanisms contribute most to the electrophysiological differences between the fibre classes. Simulations of axonal conduction suggest that the differences between CMi and CM fibres are strongly influenced by the densities of the delayed rectifier potassium channel (Kdr), the voltage-gated sodium channels NaV1.7 and NaV1.8, and the Na+/K+-ATPase. Specifically, the CM fibre profile required less Kdr and NaV1.8 in combination with more NaV1.7 and Na+/K+-ATPase. The difference between CM and CMi fibres is thus likely to reflect a relative rather than an absolute difference in protein expression. In support of this, it was possible to replicate the experimental reduction of the ADS pattern of CMi nociceptors towards a CM-like pattern following intradermal injection of nerve growth factor by decreasing the contribution of Kdr (by 50%), increasing the Na+/K+-ATPase (by 10%), and reducing the branch length from 2 cm to 1 cm. The findings highlight key molecules that potentially contribute to the NGF-induced switch in nociceptors phenotype, in particular NaV1.7 which has already been identified clinically as a principal contributor to chronic pain states such as inherited erythromelalgia.

Altered sodium channel gating as molecular basis for pain: contribution of activation, inactivation, and resurgent currents.

Lampert A, Eberhardt M, Waxman SG
Handbook of experimental pharmacology

Mutations in voltage-gated sodium channels, especially Nav1.7, can cause the genetic pain syndromes inherited erythromelalgia, small fiber neuropathy, paroxysmal extreme pain disorder, and chronic insensitivity to pain. Functional analysis of these mutations offers the possibility of understanding the potential pathomechanisms of these disease patterns and also may help to explicate the molecular mechanisms underlying pain in normal conditions. The mutations are distributed over the whole channel protein, but nevertheless induce similar changes for each pain syndrome. In this review we focus on their impact on sodium channel gating, which may be conferred via modulation of (1) conformation (affecting all gating characteristics); (2) the amount of voltage-sensing charges (affecting mainly activation); (3) interaction within the protein (e.g., binding of the inactivation linker); and (4) interaction with other proteins (e.g., for generation of resurgent currents). Understanding the molecular basis for each gating mode and its impact on cellular excitability and nociception in each disease type may provide a basis for development of more specific and effective therapeutic tools.

Kinetic modeling of Nav1.7 provides insight into erythromelalgia-associated F1449V mutation.

Gurkiewicz M, Korngreen A, Waxman SG, Lampert A
Journal of neurophysiology

Gain-of-function mutations of the voltage-gated sodium channel (VGSC) Na(v)1.7 have been linked to human pain disorders. The mutation F1449V, located at the intracellular end of transmembrane helix S6 of domain III, induces the inherited pain syndrome erythromelalgia. A kinetic model of wild-type (WT) and F1449V Na(v)1.7 may provide a basis for predicting putative intraprotein interactions. We semiautomatically constrained a Markov model using stochastic search algorithms and whole cell patch-clamp recordings from human embryonic kidney cells transfected with Na(v)1.7 and its F1449V mutation. The best models obtained simulated known differences in action potential thresholds and firing patterns in spinal sensory neurons expressing WT and F1449V. The most suitable Markov model consisted of three closed, one open, and two inactivated states. The model predicted that the F1449V mutation shifts occupancy of the closed states closer to the open state, making it easier for the channel pore to open. It also predicted that F1449V's second inactivated state is more than four times more likely to be occupied than the equivalent state in WT at hyperpolarized potentials, although the mutation still lowered the firing threshold of action potentials. The differences between WT and F1449V were not limited to a single transition. Thus a point mutation in position F1449, while phenotypically most probably affecting the activation gate, may also modify channel functions mediated by structures in more distant areas of the channel protein.

Erythromelalgia mutation L823R shifts activation and inactivation of threshold sodium channel Nav1.7 to hyperpolarized potentials.

Lampert A, Dib-Hajj SD, Eastman EM, Tyrrell L, Lin Z , et al.
Biochemical and biophysical research communications

Erythromelalgia (also termed erythermalgia) is a neuropathic pain syndrome, characterized by severe burning pain combined with redness in the extremities, triggered by mild warmth. The inherited form of erythromelalgia (IEM) has recently been linked to mutations in voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7, which is expressed in peripheral nociceptors. Here, we used whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings in HEK293 cells to characterize the IEM mutation L823R, which introduces an additional positive charge into the S4 voltage sensor of domain II. The L823R mutation produces an approximately 15mV hyperpolarizing shift in the midpoint of activation and also affects the activation slope factor. Closing of the channel from the open state (deactivation) is slowed, increasing the likelihood of the channel remaining in the open state. The L823R mutation induces a approximately 10mV hyperpolarizing shift in fast-inactivation. L823R is the only naturally-occurring IEM mutation studied thus far to shift fast-inactivation to more negative potentials. We conclude that introduction of an additional charge into the S4 segment of domain II of Nav1.7 leads to a pronounced hyperpolarizing shift of activation, a change that is expected to increase nociceptor excitability despite the hyperpolarizing shift in fast-inactivation, which is unique among the IEM mutations.

A pore-blocking hydrophobic motif at the cytoplasmic aperture of the closed-state Nav1.7 channel is disrupted by the erythromelalgia-associated F1449V mutation.

Lampert A, O'Reilly AO, Dib-Hajj SD, Tyrrell L, Wallace BA , et al.
The Journal of biological chemistry

Sodium channel Na(v)1.7 has recently elicited considerable interest as a key contributor to human pain. Gain-of-function mutations of Na(v)1.7 produce painful disorders, whereas loss-of-function Na(v)1.7 mutations produce insensitivity to pain. The inherited erythromelalgia Na(v)1.7/F1449V mutation, within the C terminus of domain III/transmembrane helix S6, shifts channel activation by -7.2 mV and accelerates time to peak, leading to nociceptor hyperexcitability. We constructed a homology model of Na(v)1.7, based on the KcsA potassium channel crystal structure, which identifies four phylogenetically conserved aromatic residues that correspond to DIII/F1449 at the C-terminal end of each of the four S6 helices. The model predicted that changes in side-chain size of residue 1449 alter the pore's cytoplasmic aperture diameter and reshape inter-domain contact surfaces that contribute to closed state stabilization. To test this hypothesis, we compared activation of wild-type and mutant Na(v)1.7 channels F1449V/L/Y/W by whole cell patch clamp analysis. All but the F1449V mutation conserve the voltage dependence of activation. Compared with wild type, time to peak was shorter in F1449V, similar in F1449L, but longer for F1449Y and F1449W, suggesting that a bulky, hydrophobic residue is necessary for normal activation. We also substituted the corresponding aromatic residue of S6 in each domain individually with valine, to mimic the naturally occurring Na(v)1.7 mutation. We show that DII/F960V and DIII/F1449V, but not DI/Y405V or DIV/F1752V, regulate Na(v)1.7 activation, consistent with well established conformational changes in DII and DIII. We propose that the four aromatic residues contribute to the gate at the cytoplasmic pore aperture, and that their ring side chains form a hydrophobic plug which stabilizes the closed state of Na(v)1.7.

Temperature dependence of erythromelalgia mutation L858F in sodium channel Nav1.7.

Han C, Lampert A, Rush AM, Dib-Hajj SD, Wang X , et al.
Molecular pain

The disabling chronic pain syndrome erythromelalgia (also termed erythermalgia) is characterized by attacks of burning pain in the extremities induced by warmth. Pharmacological treatment is often ineffective, but the pain can be alleviated by cooling of the limbs. Inherited erythromelalgia has recently been linked to mutations in the gene SCN9A, which encodes the voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7. Nav1.7 is preferentially expressed in most nociceptive DRG neurons and in sympathetic ganglion neurons. It has recently been shown that several disease-causing erythromelalgia mutations alter channel-gating behavior in a manner that increases DRG neuron excitability. Here we tested the effects of temperature on gating properties of wild type Nav1.7 and mutant L858F channels. Whole-cell voltage-clamp measurements on wild type or L858F channels expressed in HEK293 cells revealed that cooling decreases current density, slows deactivation and increases ramp currents for both mutant and wild type channels. However, cooling differentially shifts the midpoint of steady-state activation in a depolarizing direction for L858F but not for wild type channels. The cooling-dependent shift of the activation midpoint of L858F to more positive potentials brings the threshold of activation of the mutant channels closer to that of wild type Nav1.7 at lower temperatures, and is likely to contribute to the alleviation of painful symptoms upon cooling in affected limbs in patients with this erythromelalgia mutation.

Size matters: Erythromelalgia mutation S241T in Nav1.7 alters channel gating.

Lampert A, Dib-Hajj SD, Tyrrell L, Waxman SG
The Journal of biological chemistry

The Nav1.7 sodium channel is preferentially expressed in most nociceptive dorsal root ganglion neurons and in sympathetic neurons. Inherited erythromelalgia (IEM, also known as erythermalgia), an autosomal dominant neuropathy characterized by burning pain in the extremities in response to mild warmth, has been linked to mutations in Nav1.7. Recently, a substitution of Ser-241 by threonine (S241T) in the domain I S4-S5 linker of Nav1.7 was identified in a family with IEM. To investigate the possible causative role of this mutation in the pathophysiology of IEM, we used whole-cell voltage-clamp analysis to study the effects of S241T on Nav1.7 gating in HEK293 cells. We found a hyperpolarizing shift of activation midpoint by 8.4 mV, an accelerated time to peak, slowing of deactivation, and an increase in the current in response to small, slow depolarizations. Additionally, S241T produced an enhancement of slow inactivation, shifting the midpoint by -12.3 mV. Because serine and threonine have similar biochemical properties, the S241T substitution suggested that the size of the side chain at this position affected channel gating. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the effect of S241A and S241L substitutions on the gating properties of Nav1.7. Although S241A did not alter the properties of the channel, S241L mimicked the effects of S241T. We conclude that the linker between S4 and S5 in domain I of Nav1.7 modulates gating of this channel, and that a larger side chain at position 241 interferes with its gating mechanisms.