Neanderthal introgression in SCN9A impacts mechanical pain sensitivity
-
Published:2023-10-10
Issue:1
Volume:6
Page:
-
ISSN:2399-3642
-
Container-title:Communications Biology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Commun Biol
Author:
Faux PierreORCID, Ding Li, Ramirez-Aristeguieta Luis MiguelORCID, Chacón-Duque J. CamiloORCID, Comini MaddalenaORCID, Mendoza-Revilla Javier, Fuentes-Guajardo Macarena, Jaramillo Claudia, Arias WilliamORCID, Hurtado Malena, Villegas Valeria, Granja Vanessa, Barquera RodrigoORCID, Everardo-Martínez PaolaORCID, Quinto-Sánchez Mirsha, Gómez-Valdés JorgeORCID, Villamil-Ramírez Hugo, Silva de Cerqueira Caio C., Hünemeier Tábita, Ramallo Virginia, Gonzalez-José Rolando, Schüler-Faccini Lavinia, Bortolini Maria-Cátira, Acuña-Alonzo Victor, Canizales-Quinteros Samuel, Poletti Giovanni, Gallo Carla, Rothhammer Francisco, Rojas Winston, Schmid Annina B.ORCID, Adhikari KaustubhORCID, Bennett David L.ORCID, Ruiz-Linares AndrésORCID
Abstract
AbstractThe Nav1.7 voltage-gated sodium channel plays a key role in nociception. Three functional variants in the SCN9A gene (encoding M932L, V991L, and D1908G in Nav1.7), have recently been identified as stemming from Neanderthal introgression and to associate with pain symptomatology in UK BioBank data. In 1000 genomes data, these variants are absent in Europeans but common in Latin Americans. Analysing high-density genotype data from 7594 Latin Americans, we characterized Neanderthal introgression in SCN9A. We find that tracts of introgression occur on a Native American genomic background, have an average length of ~123 kb and overlap the M932L, V991L, and D1908G coding positions. Furthermore, we measured experimentally six pain thresholds in 1623 healthy Colombians. We found that Neanderthal ancestry in SCN9A is significantly associated with a lower mechanical pain threshold after sensitization with mustard oil and evidence of additivity of effects across Nav1.7 variants. Our findings support the reported association of Neanderthal Nav1.7 variants with clinical pain, define a specific sensory modality affected by archaic introgression in SCN9A and are consistent with independent effects of the Neanderthal variants on Nav1.7 function.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Reference64 articles.
1. Bennett, D. L., Clark, A. J., Huang, J., Waxman, S. G. & Dib-Hajj, S. D. The role of voltage-gated sodium channels in pain signaling. Physiol. Rev. 99, 1079–1151 (2019). 2. Cox, J. J. et al. An SCN9A channelopathy causes congenital inability to experience pain. Nature 444, 894–898 (2006). 3. Yang, Y. et al. Mutations in SCN9A, encoding a sodium channel alpha subunit, in patients with primary erythermalgia. J. Med. Genet. 41, 171–174 (2004). 4. Fertleman, C. R. et al. SCN9A mutations in paroxysmal extreme pain disorder: allelic variants underlie distinct channel defects and phenotypes. Neuron 52, 767–774 (2006). 5. Reimann, F. et al. Pain perception is altered by a nucleotide polymorphism in SCN9A. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 107, 5148–5153 (2010).
|
|