1. Pain-causing stinging nettle toxins target TMEM233 to modulate NaV1.7 function.
- Author
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Jami, Sina, Deuis, Jennifer R., Klasfauseweh, Tabea, Cheng, Xiaoyang, Kurdyukov, Sergey, Chung, Felicity, Okorokov, Andrei L., Li, Shengnan, Zhang, Jiangtao, Cristofori-Armstrong, Ben, Israel, Mathilde R., Ju, Robert J., Robinson, Samuel D., Zhao, Peng, Ragnarsson, Lotten, Andersson, Åsa, Tran, Poanna, Schendel, Vanessa, McMahon, Kirsten L., and Tran, Hue N. T.
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SODIUM channels ,STINGING nettle ,TOXINS ,MEMBRANE proteins ,PEPTIDES ,SENSORY neurons - Abstract
Voltage-gated sodium (Na
V ) channels are critical regulators of neuronal excitability and are targeted by many toxins that directly interact with the pore-forming α subunit, typically via extracellular loops of the voltage-sensing domains, or residues forming part of the pore domain. Excelsatoxin A (ExTxA), a pain-causing knottin peptide from the Australian stinging tree Dendrocnide excelsa, is the first reported plant-derived NaV channel modulating peptide toxin. Here we show that TMEM233, a member of the dispanin family of transmembrane proteins expressed in sensory neurons, is essential for pharmacological activity of ExTxA at NaV channels, and that co-expression of TMEM233 modulates the gating properties of NaV 1.7. These findings identify TMEM233 as a previously unknown NaV 1.7-interacting protein, position TMEM233 and the dispanins as accessory proteins that are indispensable for toxin-mediated effects on NaV channel gating, and provide important insights into the function of NaV channels in sensory neurons. Voltage-gated sodium channels function as multiprotein signaling complexes. Here, authors show that the dispanin TMEM233 is essential for activity of stinging nettle toxins and that co-expression of TMEM233 modulates the gating properties of NaV 1.7. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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