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Glycosylation of CaV3.2 Channels Contributes to the Hyperalgesia in Peripheral Neuropathy of Type 1 Diabetes

Sonja Lj. Joksimovic, J.G. Evans, William E. McIntire, Peihan Orestes, Paula Q. Barrett, Vesna Jevtović‐Todorović, Slobodan M. Todorovic

2020Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Our previous studies implicated glycosylation of the Ca V 3.2 isoform of T-type Ca 2+ channels (T-channels) in the development of Type 2 painful peripheral diabetic neuropathy (PDN). Here we investigated biophysical mechanisms underlying the modulation of recombinant Ca V 3.2 channel by de-glycosylation enzymes such as neuraminidase (NEU) and PNGase-F (PNG), as well as their behavioral and biochemical effects in painful PDN Type 1. In our in vitro study we used whole-cell recordings of current-voltage relationships to confirm that Ca V 3.2 current densities were decreased ~2-fold after de-glycosylation. Furthermore, de-glycosylation induced a significant depolarizing shift in the steady-state relationships for activation and inactivation while producing little effects on the kinetics of current deactivation and recovery from inactivation. PDN was induced in vivo by injections of streptozotocin (STZ) in adult female C57Bl/6j wild type (WT) mice, adult female Sprague Dawley rats and Ca V 3.2 knock-out (KO mice). Either NEU or vehicle (saline) were locally injected into the right hind paws or intrathecally. We found that injections of NEU, but not vehicle, completely reversed thermal and mechanical hyperalgesia in diabetic WT rats and mice. In contrast, NEU did not alter baseline thermal and mechanical sensitivity in the Ca V 3.2 KO mice which also failed to develop painful PDN. Finally, we used biochemical methods with gel-shift analysis to directly demonstrate that N-terminal fragments of native Ca V 3.2 channels in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) are glycosylated in both healthy and diabetic animals. Our results demonstrate that in sensory neurons glycosylation-induced alterations in Ca V 3.2 channels in vivo directly enhance diabetic hyperalgesia, and that glycosylation inhibitors can be used to ameliorate painful symptoms in Type 1 diabetes. We expect that our studies may lead to a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying painful PDN in an effort to facilitate the discovery of novel treatments for this intractable disease.

Topics & Concepts

GlycosylationHyperalgesiaPeripheral neuropathyStreptozotocinDorsal root ganglionPharmacologyChemistryIn vivoEx vivoInternal medicinePatch clampEndocrinologyMedicineDiabetes mellitusIn vitroElectrophysiologyBiologyReceptorBiochemistryAnatomyDorsumNociceptionBiotechnologyPain Mechanisms and TreatmentsBotulinum Toxin and Related Neurological DisordersIon channel regulation and function