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Paclitaxel effects on axonal localization and vesicular trafficking of NaV1.8.

  • Christopher A Baker‎ et al.
  • Frontiers in molecular neuroscience‎
  • 2023‎

Patients treated with paclitaxel (PTX) or other antineoplastic agents can experience chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN), a debilitating side effect characterized by numbness and pain. PTX interferes with microtubule-based transport, which inhibits tumor growth via cell cycle arrest but can also affect other cellular functions including trafficking of ion channels critical to transduction of stimuli by sensory neurons of the dorsal root ganglia (DRG). We examined the effects of PTX on voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.8, which is preferentially expressed in DRG neurons, using a microfluidic chamber culture system and chemigenetic labeling to observe anterograde channel transport to the endings of DRG axons in real time. PTX treatment increased the numbers of NaV1.8-containing vesicles traversing the axons. Vesicles in PTX-treated cells exhibited greater average velocity, along with shorter and less frequent pauses along their trajectories. These events were paralleled by greater surface accumulation of NaV1.8 channels at the distal ends of DRG axons. These results were consistent with observations that NaV1.8 is trafficked in the same vesicles containing NaV1.7 channels, which are also involved in pain syndromes in humans and are similarly affected by PTX treatment. However, unlike Nav1.7, we did not detect increased NaV1.8 current density measured at the neuronal soma, suggesting a differential effect of PTX on trafficking of NaV1.8 in soma versus axonal compartments. Therapeutic targeting of axonal vesicular traffic would affect both Nav1.7 and Nav1.8 channels and increase the possibilities of alleviating pain associated with CIPN.


Conserved but not critical: Trafficking and function of NaV1.7 are independent of highly conserved polybasic motifs.

  • Sidharth Tyagi‎ et al.
  • Frontiers in molecular neuroscience‎
  • 2023‎

Non-addictive treatment of chronic pain represents a major unmet clinical need. Peripheral voltage-gated sodium (NaV) channels are an attractive target for pain therapy because they initiate and propagate action potentials in primary afferents that detect and transduce noxious stimuli. NaV1.7 sets the gain on peripheral pain-signaling neurons and is the best validated peripheral ion channel involved in human pain, and previous work has shown that it is transported in vesicles in sensory axons which also carry Rab6a, a small GTPase known to be involved in vesicular packaging and axonal transport. Understanding the mechanism of the association between Rab6a and NaV1.7 could inform therapeutic modalities to decrease trafficking of NaV1.7 to the distal axonal membrane. Polybasic motifs (PBM) have been shown to regulate Rab-protein interactions in a variety of contexts. In this study, we explored whether two PBMs in the cytoplasmic loop that joins domains I and II of human NaV1.7 were responsible for association with Rab6a and regulate axonal trafficking of the channel. Using site-directed mutagenesis we generated NaV1.7 constructs with alanine substitutions in the two PBMs. Voltage-clamp recordings showed that the constructs retain wild-type like gating properties. Optical Pulse-chase Axonal Long-distance (OPAL) imaging in live sensory axons shows that mutations of these PBMs do not affect co-trafficking of Rab6a and NaV1.7, or the accumulation of the channel at the distal axonal surface. Thus, these polybasic motifs are not required for interaction of NaV1.7 with the Rab6a GTPase, or for trafficking of the channel to the plasma membrane.


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