The neuronal potassium current IA is a potential target for pain during chronic inflammation

Abstract Voltage‐gated ion channels play a key role in the action potential (AP) initiation and its propagation in sensory neurons. Modulation of their activity during chronic inflammation creates a persistent pain state. In this study, we sought to determine how peripheral inflammation caused by co...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael Biet, Marc‐André Dansereau, Philippe Sarret, Robert Dumaine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-08-01
Series:Physiological Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14975
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Summary:Abstract Voltage‐gated ion channels play a key role in the action potential (AP) initiation and its propagation in sensory neurons. Modulation of their activity during chronic inflammation creates a persistent pain state. In this study, we sought to determine how peripheral inflammation caused by complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) alters the fast sodium (INa), L‐type calcium (ICaL), and potassium (IK) currents in primary afferent fibers to increase nociception. In our model, intraplantar administration of CFA induced mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia at day 14 post‐injection. Using whole‐cell patch‐clamp recording in dissociated small (C), medium (Aδ), and large‐sized (Aβ) rat dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons, we found that CFA prolonged the AP duration and increased the amplitude of the tetrodotoxin‐resistant (TTX‐r) INa in Aβ fibers. In addition, CFA accelerated the recovery of INa from inactivation in C and Aδ nociceptive fibers but enhanced the late sodium current (INaL) only in Aδ and Aβ neurons. Inflammation similarly reduced the amplitude of ICaL in each neuronal cell type. Fourteen days after injection, CFA reduced both components of IK (IKdr and IA) in Aδ fibers. We also found that IA was significantly larger in C and Aδ neurons in normal conditions and during chronic inflammation. Our data, therefore, suggest that targeting the transient potassium current IA represents an efficient way to shift the balance toward antinociception during inflammation, since its activation will selectively decrease the AP duration in nociceptive fibers. Altogether, our data indicate that complex interactions between IK, INa, and ICaL reduce pain threshold by concomitantly enhancing the activity of nociceptive neurons and reducing the inhibitory action of Aβ fibers during chronic inflammation.
ISSN:2051-817X