Sodium voltage-gated channel alpha subunit 9 (also Na
v1.7) is a
sodium ion channel that, in humans, is encoded by the ''SCN9A'' gene.
It is usually expressed at high levels in two types of
neuron
A neuron (American English), neurone (British English), or nerve cell, is an membrane potential#Cell excitability, excitable cell (biology), cell that fires electric signals called action potentials across a neural network (biology), neural net ...
s: the nociceptive (pain) neurons at the
dorsal root ganglion (DRG) and
trigeminal ganglion; and
sympathetic ganglion neurons, which are part of the
autonomic (involuntary) nervous system.
Function

Sodium voltage-gated channel alpha subunit 9 plays a critical role in the generation and conduction of
action potential
An action potential (also known as a nerve impulse or "spike" when in a neuron) is a series of quick changes in voltage across a cell membrane. An action potential occurs when the membrane potential of a specific Cell (biology), cell rapidly ri ...
s and is thus important for electrical signaling by most excitable cells. Na
v1.7 is present at the endings of pain-sensing nerves, the
nociceptors, close to the region where the impulse is initiated. Stimulation of the nociceptor nerve endings produces "generator potentials", which are small changes in the voltage across the neuronal membranes. The Na
v1.7 channel amplifies these membrane depolarizations, and when the membrane potential difference reaches a specific
threshold, the neuron fires. In sensory neurons, multiple voltage-dependent sodium currents can be differentiated by their voltage dependence and by sensitivity to the voltage-gated sodium-channel blocker
tetrodotoxin
Tetrodotoxin (TTX) is a potent neurotoxin. Its name derives from Tetraodontiformes, an Order (biology), order that includes Tetraodontidae, pufferfish, porcupinefish, ocean sunfish, and triggerfish; several of these species carry the toxin. Alt ...
. The Na
v1.7 channel produces a rapidly activating and inactivating current which is sensitive to the level of tetrodotoxin.
Na
v1.7 is important in the early phases of neuronal
electrogenesis. Na
v1.7 activity consists of a slow transition of the channel into an inactive state when it is depolarized, even to a minor degree.
This property allows these channels to remain available for activation with even small or slowly developing
depolarizations. Stimulation of the nociceptor nerve endings produces "generator potentials", small changes in the voltage across the neuronal membranes.
This brings neurons to a voltage that stimulate
Nav1.8, which has a more depolarized activation threshold that produces most of the transmembrane current responsible for the depolarizing phase of action potentials.
Cell-Based Assays
Heteromultimeric ion channels such as Na
v1.7 comprise multiple subunits including a pore forming subunits and accessory subunits. Creation of laboratory cells that comprise multiple subunits is challenging. Fluorogenic signaling probes and flow cytometry have been used to create laboratory cells that comprise heteromultimetic Na
v1.7 including at least two of its accessory subunits.
Clinical significance
Animal studies
The critical role of Na
v1.7 in
nociception and
pain
Pain is a distressing feeling often caused by intense or damaging Stimulus (physiology), stimuli. The International Association for the Study of Pain defines pain as "an unpleasant sense, sensory and emotional experience associated with, or res ...
was originally shown using
Cre-Lox recombination tissue specific knockout mice. These
transgenic mice specifically lack Na
v1.7 in
Nav1.8 positive nociceptors and showed reduced behavioural responses, specifically to acute mechanical and inflammatory pain assays. At the same time, behavioural responses to acute thermal and
neuropathic pain assays remained intact.
However, the expression of Na
v1.7 is not restricted to Na
v1.8 positive DRG neurons. Further work examining the behavioural response of two other transgenic mouse strains; one lacking Na
v1.7 in all DRG neurons and the other lacking Na
v1.7 in all DRG neurons as well as all sympathetic neurons, has revealed distinct sets of modality specific peripheral neurons.
Therefore, Na
v1.7 expressed in Na
v1.8 positive DRG neurons is critical for normal responses to acute mechanical and inflammatory pain assays. Whilst Na
v1.7 expressed in Na
v1.8 negative DRG neurons is critical for normal responses to acute thermal pain assays. Finally, Nav1.7 expressed in sympathetic neurons is critical for normal behavioural responses to neuropathic pain assays.
Primary erythromelalgia
Mutation in Na
v1.7 may result in primary
erythromelalgia (PE), an autosomal dominant, inherited disorder which is characterized by attacks or episodes of symmetrical burning
pain
Pain is a distressing feeling often caused by intense or damaging Stimulus (physiology), stimuli. The International Association for the Study of Pain defines pain as "an unpleasant sense, sensory and emotional experience associated with, or res ...
of the feet, lower legs, and sometimes hands, elevated skin temperature of affected areas, and reddened extremities. The mutation causes excessive channel activity which suggests that Na
v1.7 sets the gain on pain signaling in humans. It was observed that a
missense mutation in the ''SCN9A'' gene affected conserved residues in the pore-forming α subunit of the Na
v1.7 channel. Multiple studies have found a dozen ''SCN9A'' mutations in multiple families as causing erythromelagia.
All of the observed
erythromelalgia mutations that are observed are missense mutations that change important and highly conserved amino acid residues of the Na
v1.7 protein. The majority of mutations that cause PE are located in cytoplasmic linkers of the Na
v1.7 channel, however some mutations are present in
transmembrane
A transmembrane protein is a type of integral membrane protein that spans the entirety of the cell membrane. Many transmembrane proteins function as gateways to permit the transport of specific substances across the membrane. They frequently u ...
domains of the channel. The PE mutations cause a hyperpolarizing shift in the voltage dependence of channel activation, which allows the channel to be activated by smaller than normal depolarizations, thus enhancing the activity of Na
v1.7. Moreover, the majority of the PE mutations also slow deactivation, thus keeping the channel open longer once it is activated.
In addition, in response to a slow, depolarizing stimulus, most mutant channels will generate a larger than normal sodium current. Each of these alterations in activation and deactivation can contribute to the hyperexcitability of pain-signaling
DRG neurons expressing these mutant channels, thus causing extreme sensitivity to pain (
hyperalgesia). While the expression of PE Na
v1.7 mutations produces hyperexcitability in DRG neurons, studies on cultured rat in
sympathetic ganglion neurons indicate that expression of these same PE mutations results in reduction of excitability of these cells. This occurs because Na
v1.8 channels, which are selectively expressed in addition to Na
v1.7 in DRG neurons, are not present within sympathetic ganglion neurons. Thus lack of Na
v1.7 results in inactivation of the sodium channels results in reduced excitability. Thus physiological interaction of Na
v1.7 and Na
v1.8 can explain the reason that PE presents with pain due to hyperexcitability of
nociceptors and with sympathetic dysfunction that is most likely due to hypoexcitability of sympathetic ganglion neurons.
Recent studies have associated a defect in ''SCN9A'' with
congenital insensitivity to pain.
Paroxysmal extreme pain disorder
Paroxysmal extreme pain disorder (PEPD) is another rare, extreme pain disorder.
Like primary erythromelalgia, PEPD is similarly the result of a gain-of-function mutation in the gene encoding the Na
v1.7 channel.
The decreased inactivation caused by the mutation is cause of prolonged action potentials and repetitive firing. Such altered firing will cause increased pain sensation and increased sympathetic nervous system activity, producing the phenotype observed in patients with PEPD.
Congenital insensitivity to pain
Individuals with
congenital insensitivity to pain have painless injuries beginning in infancy but otherwise normal sensory responses upon examination. Patients frequently have bruises and cuts, and are often only diagnosed because of limping or lack of use of a
limb. Individuals have been reported to be able to walk over burning coals and to insert knives and drive spikes through their arms. It has been observed that the insensitivity to pain does not appear to be due to axonal degeneration.
A mutation that causes loss of Na
v1.7 function has been detected in three consanguineous families from northern Pakistan. All mutations observed were
nonsense mutation, with the majority of affected patients having a homozygous mutation in the ''SCN9A'' gene. This discovery linked loss of Na
v1.7 function with the inability to experience pain. This is in contrast with the genetic basis of primary
erythromelalgia in which the disorder results from gain-of-function mutations.
Clinical analgesics
Local anesthetics such as
lidocaine, but also the anticonvulsant
phenytoin, mediate their analgesic effects by non-selectively blocking voltage-gated sodium channels.
Na
v1.7, as well as
Nav1.3, Na
v1.8, and
Nav1.9, are the specific channels that have been implicated in pain signaling.
Thus, the blockade of these specific channels is likely to underlie the analgesia of local anesthetics and anticonvulsants such as phenytoin.
In addition, inhibition of these channels is also likely responsible for the analgesic efficacy of certain
tricyclic antidepressants, and of
mexiletine.
Itch
Mutations of Na
v1.7 have been linked to itching (pruritus),
and genetic knockouts of Na
v1.7
and an antibody that inhibits Na
v1.7 also appear to inhibit itching.
Future prospects
As the Na
v1.7 channel appears to be a highly important component in nociception, with null activity conferring total analgesia,
there has been immense interest in developing selective Na
v1.7 channel blockers as potential novel analgesics.
Since Na
v1.7 is not present in heart tissue or the central nervous system, selective blockers of Na
v1.7, unlike non-selective blockers such as local anesthetics, could be safely used systemically for pain relief. Moreover, selective Na
v1.7 blockers may prove to be far more effective analgesics, and with fewer undesirable effects, relative to current pharmacotherapies.
A number of selective Na
v1.7 (and/or Na
v1.8) blockers are in clinical development, including
funapide (TV-45070, XEN402),
PF-05089771,
DSP-2230,
NKTR-171,
GDC-0276, and
RG7893 (GDC-0287).
Ralfinamide (formerly NW-1029, FCE-26742A, PNU-0154339E) is a multimodal, non-selective Na
v channel blocker which is under development for the treatment of pain.
Surprisingly, many potent Na
v1.7 blockers have been found to be clinically effective but only relatively weak analgesics.
Recently, it has been elucidated that congenital loss of Nav
v1.7 results in a dramatic increase in the levels of
endogenous enkephalins, and it was found that blocking these
opioids with the
opioid antagonist naloxone allowed for pain sensitivity both in Nav
v1.7 null mice and in a woman with a defective Nav
v1.7 gene and associated
congenital insensitivity to pain.
Development of the venom-derived peptide, JNJ63955 allowed for selective inhibition of Na
v1.7 only while it was in the closed state, which produced results, in mice, much more similar to knock-out models.
It is possible that channel blockade is maximal only when the channel is inhibited in its closed state. It appears that complete inactivation of Na
v1.7-mediated sodium efflux is necessary to upregulate enkephalin expression enough to achieve complete analgesia. Prior to the development of JNJ63955, the most potent
v 1.7">av 1.7antagonists had failed in regards to achieving the same degree of analgesia as congenital Na
v1.7 inactivity.
The proposed mechanism also suggests that the analgesic effects of Na
v1.7 blockers may be greatly potentiated by the co-administration of
exogenous opioids or
enkephalinase inhibitors.
Supporting this idea, a strong analgesic synergy between local anesthetics and topical opioids has already been observed in clinical research.
An additional implication of the aforementioned findings is that congenital insensitivity to pain may be clinically treatable with opioid antagonists.
In 2021, researchers described a novel approach, developing a
CRISPR-dCas9 epigenome editing method for a
potential treatment of chronic pain by repressing Na
v1.7
gene expression
Gene expression is the process (including its Regulation of gene expression, regulation) by which information from a gene is used in the synthesis of a functional gene product that enables it to produce end products, proteins or non-coding RNA, ...
which showed therapeutic potential in three mouse models of chronic pain.
References
Further reading
*
External links
*
GeneReviews/NCBI/NIH/UW entry on SCN9A-Related Inherited Erythromelalgia*
{{Channelergics
Sodium channels