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Publication : PKCε phosphorylation of the sodium channel NaV1.8 increases channel function and produces mechanical hyperalgesia in mice.

First Author  Wu DF Year  2012
Journal  J Clin Invest Volume  122
Issue  4 Pages  1306-15
PubMed ID  22426212 Mgi Jnum  J:184549
Mgi Id  MGI:5424305 Doi  10.1172/JCI61934
Citation  Wu DF, et al. (2012) PKCepsilon phosphorylation of the sodium channel NaV1.8 increases channel function and produces mechanical hyperalgesia in mice. J Clin Invest 122(4):1306-15
abstractText  Mechanical hyperalgesia is a common and potentially disabling complication of many inflammatory and neuropathic conditions. Activation of the enzyme PKCepsilon in primary afferent nociceptors is a major mechanism that underlies mechanical hyperalgesia, but the PKCepsilon substrates involved downstream are not known. Here, we report that in a proteomic screen we identified the NaV1.8 sodium channel, which is selectively expressed in nociceptors, as a PKCepsilon substrate. PKCepsilon-mediated phosphorylation increased NaV1.8 currents, lowered the threshold voltage for activation, and produced a depolarizing shift in inactivation in wild-type - but not in PKCepsilon-null - sensory neurons. PKCepsilon phosphorylated NaV1.8 at S1452, and alanine substitution at this site blocked PKCepsilon modulation of channel properties. Moreover, a specific PKCepsilon activator peptide, psiepsilonRACK, produced mechanical hyperalgesia in wild-type mice but not in Scn10a-/- mice, which lack NaV1.8 channels. These studies demonstrate that NaV1.8 is an important, direct substrate of PKCepsilon that mediates PKCepsilon-dependent mechanical hyperalgesia.
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