Nociceptive Neurons Differentially Express Fast and Slow T-Type Ca2+Currents in Different Types of Diabetic Neuropathy

Author:

Khomula Eugen V.12,Borisyuk Anya L.2,Viatchenko-Karpinski Viacheslav Y.2,Briede Andrea2,Belan Pavel V.12,Voitenko Nana V.12

Affiliation:

1. International Center of Molecular Physiology of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, 4 Bogomoletz Street., Kyiv 01024, Ukraine

2. State Key Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Bogomoletz Institute of Physiology of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, 4 Bogomoletz Street, Kyiv 01024, Ukraine

Abstract

T-type Ca2+channels are known as important participants of nociception and their remodeling contributes to diabetes-induced alterations of pain sensation. In this work we have established that about 30% of rat nonpeptidergic thermal C-type nociceptive (NTCN) neurons of segments L4–L6 express a slow T-type Ca2+current (T-current) while a fast T-current is expressed in the other 70% of these neurons. Streptozotocin-induced diabetes in young rats resulted in thermal hyperalgesia, hypoalgesia, or normalgesia 5-6 weeks after the induction. Our results show that NTCN neurons obtained from hyperalgesic animals do not express the slow T-current. Meanwhile, the fraction of neurons expressing the slow T-current did not significantly change in the hypo- and normalgesic diabetic groups. Moreover, the peak current density of fast T-current was significantly increased only in the neurons of hyperalgesic group. In contrast, the peak current density of slow T-current was significantly decreased in the hypo- and normalgesic groups. Experimental diabetes also resulted in a depolarizing shift of steady-state inactivation of fast T-current in the hyperalgesic group and slow T-current in the hypo- and normalgesic groups. We suggest that the observed changes may contribute to expression of different types of peripheral diabetic neuropathy occurring during the development of diabetes mellitus.

Funder

NASU Biotechnology and Functional Genomics and Metabolomics

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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