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    Pain-causing stinging nettle toxins target TMEM233 to modulate NaV1.7 function

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    s41467-023-37963-2.pdf (3.899Mb)
    Date
    2023
    Author
    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.
    Tran, Hue N. T.
    Chin, Yanni K.-Y.
    Zhu, Yifei
    Liu, Junyu
    Crawford, Theo
    Purushothamvasan, Saipriyaa
    Habib, Abdella M.
    Andersson, David A.
    Rash, Lachlan D.
    Wood, John N.
    Zhao, Jing
    Stehbens, Samantha J.
    Mobli, Mehdi
    Leffler, Andreas
    Jiang, Daohua
    Cox, James J.
    Waxman, Stephen G.
    Dib-Hajj, Sulayman D.
    Gregory Neely, G.
    Durek, Thomas
    Vetter, Irina
    ...show more authors ...show less authors
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    Abstract
    Voltage-gated sodium (NaV) 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 NaV1.7. These findings identify TMEM233 as a previously unknown NaV1.7-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.
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-37963-2
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/42691
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    • Medicine Research [‎1759‎ items ]

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