A phenotypic screening platform for chronic pain therapeutics using all-optical electrophysiology

Author:

Liu Pin W.1,Zhang Hongkang1,Werley Christopher A.1,Pichler Monika1,Ryan Steven J.1,Lewarch Caitlin L.1,Jacques Jane1,Grooms Jennifer1,Ferrante Jean1,Li Guangde1,Zhang Dawei1,Bremmer Nate1,Barnett Adam1,Chantre Romina1,Elder Amy E.1,Cohen Adam E.2,Williams Luis A.1,Dempsey Graham T.1,McManus Owen B.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Quiver Bioscience, Cambridge, MA, United States,

2. Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States

Abstract

Abstract Chronic pain associated with osteoarthritis (OA) remains an intractable problem with few effective treatment options. New approaches are needed to model the disease biology and to drive discovery of therapeutics. We present an in vitro model of OA pain, where dorsal root ganglion (DRG) sensory neurons were sensitized by a defined mixture of disease-relevant inflammatory mediators, here called Sensitizing PAin Reagent Composition or SPARC. Osteoarthritis-SPARC components showed synergistic or additive effects when applied in combination and induced pain phenotypes in vivo. To measure the effect of OA-SPARC on neural firing in a scalable format, we used a custom system for high throughput all-optical electrophysiology. This system enabled light-based membrane voltage recordings from hundreds of neurons in parallel with single cell and single action potential resolution and a throughput of up to 500,000 neurons per day. A computational framework was developed to construct a multiparameter OA-SPARC neuronal phenotype and to quantitatively assess phenotype reversal by candidate pharmacology. We screened ∼3000 approved drugs and mechanistically focused compounds, yielding data from over 1.2 million individual neurons with detailed assessment of functional OA-SPARC phenotype rescue and orthogonal “off-target” effects. Analysis of confirmed hits revealed diverse potential analgesic mechanisms including ion channel modulators and other mechanisms including MEK inhibitors and tyrosine kinase modulators. Our results suggest that the Raf-MEK-ERK axis in DRG neurons may integrate the inputs from multiple upstream inflammatory mediators found in osteoarthritis patient joints, and MAPK pathway activation in DRG neurons may contribute to chronic pain in patients with osteoarthritis.

Funder

National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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