Involvement of ASIC1a channels in the spinal processing of pain information by deep projection neurons
2021
Dorsal horn of the spinal cord is an important crossroad of pain neuraxis, especially for the neuronal plasticity mechanisms that can lead to chronic pain states. Windup is a well-known spinal pain facilitation process initially described several decades ago, but which exact mechanism is still not fully understood. Here, we combine both ex vivo and in vivo electrophysiological recordings of spinal neurons with computational modelling to demonstrate a role for ASIC1a-containing channels in the windup process. Spinal application of the ASIC1a inhibitory venom peptides mambalgin-1 and psalmotoxin-1 (PcTx1) significantly reduces the ability of deep wide dynamic range (WDR) neurons to develop windup in vivo. All deep WDR-like neurons recorded from spinal slices exhibit an ASIC current with biophysical and pharmacological characteristics consistent with functional expression of ASIC1a/ASIC2 heteromeric channels. A computational model of WDR neuron supplemented with heteromeric ASIC1a/ASIC2 channel parameters accurately reproduces the experimental data, further supporting a positive contribution of these channels to windup. It also predicts a calcium-dependent windup decrease for elevated ASIC conductances, a phenomenon that was experimentally validated using either a combination of calcium-activated potassium channel inhibitory peptides (apamin and iberiotoxin), or the Texas coral snake ASIC-activating toxin (MitTx). This study demonstrates a possible dual contribution to windup of calcium permeable ASIC1a/ASIC2 channels in deep laminae projecting neurons, promoting it upon moderate channel activity, but ultimately leading to calcium-dependent windup inhibition associated to potassium channels when activity increases.
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