1. A modelling study to dissect the potential role of voltage-gated ion channels in activity-dependent conduction velocity changes as identified in small fiber neuropathy patients.
- Author
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Maxion, Anna, Kutafina, Ekaterina, Dohrn, Maike F., Sacré, Pierre, Lampert, Angelika, Tigerholm, Jenny, and Namer, Barbara
- Subjects
ION channels ,VOLTAGE-gated ion channels ,MEMBRANE potential ,NERVE fibers ,NEUROPATHY ,NEURALGIA ,VELOCITY - Abstract
Objective: Patients with small fiber neuropathy (SFN) suffer from neuropathic pain, which is still a therapeutic problem. Changed activation patterns of mechanoinsensitive peripheral nerve fibers (CMi) could cause neuropathic pain. However, there is sparse knowledge about mechanisms leading to CMi dysfunction since it is difficult to dissect specific molecular mechanisms in humans. We used an in-silico model to elucidate molecular causes of CMi dysfunction as observed in single nerve fiber recordings (microneurography) of SFN patients. Approach: We analyzed microneurography data from 97 CMi-fibers from healthy individuals and 34 of SFN patients to identify activity-dependent changes in conduction velocity. Using the NEURON environment, we adapted a biophysical realistic preexisting CMi-fiber model with ion channels described by HodgkinHuxley dynamics for identifying molecular mechanisms leading to those changes. Via a grid search optimization, we assessed the interplay between different ion channels, Na-K-pump, and resting membrane potential. Main results: Changing a single ion channel conductance, Na-K-pump or membrane potential individually is not sufficient to reproduce in-silico CMi-fiber dysfunction of unchanged activity-dependent conduction velocity slowing and quicker normalization of conduction velocity after stimulation as observed in microneurography. We identified the best combination of mechanisms: increased conductance of potassium delayed-rectifier and decreased conductance of NaK-pump and depolarized membrane potential. When the membrane potential is unchanged, opposite changes in Na-K-pump and ion channels generate the same effect. Significance: Our study suggests that not one single mechanism accounts for pain-relevant changes in CMi-fibers, but a combination of mechanisms. A depolarized membrane potential, as previously observed in patients with neuropathic pain, leads to changes in the contribution of ion channels and the Na-K-pump. Thus, when searching for targets for the treatment of neuropathic pain, combinations of several molecules in interplay with the membrane potential should be regarded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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