Therapeutic inhibition of keratinocyte TRPV3 sensory channel by local anesthetic dyclonine

Author:

Liu Qiang1,Wang Jin2,Wei Xin1,Hu Juan1,Ping Conghui1,Gao Yue1,Xie Chang1,Wang Peiyu1,Cao Peng3,Cao Zhengyu4,Yu Ye2,Li Dongdong5ORCID,Yao Jing1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Virology, Hubei Key Laboratory of Cell Homeostasis, College of Life Sciences, Frontier Science Center for Immunology and Metabolism, Wuhan University

2. School of Basic Medicine and Clinical Pharmacy, China Pharmaceutical University

3. Hospital of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine, Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine

4. State Key Laboratory of Natural Medicines and Jiangsu Provincial Key Laboratory for TCM Evaluation and Translational Development, School of Traditional Chinese Pharmacy, China Pharmaceutical University

5. Sorbonne Université, Institute of Biology Paris Seine, Neuroscience Paris Seine, CNRS UMR8246, Inserm U1130

Abstract

The multimodal sensory channel transient receptor potential vanilloid-3 (TRPV3) is expressed in epidermal keratinocytes and implicated in chronic pruritus, allergy, and inflammation-related skin disorders. Gain-of-function mutations of TRPV3 cause hair growth disorders in mice and Olmsted syndrome in humans. Nevertheless, whether and how TRPV3 could be therapeutically targeted remains to be elucidated. We here report that mouse and human TRPV3 channel is targeted by the clinical medication dyclonine that exerts a potent inhibitory effect. Accordingly, dyclonine rescued cell death caused by gain-of-function TRPV3 mutations and suppressed pruritus symptoms in vivo in mouse model. At the single-channel level, dyclonine inhibited TRPV3 open probability but not the unitary conductance. By molecular simulations and mutagenesis, we further uncovered key residues in TRPV3 pore region that could toggle the inhibitory efficiency of dyclonine. The functional and mechanistic insights obtained on dyclonine-TRPV3 interaction will help to conceive therapeutics for skin inflammation.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province

Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province

Fundamental Research Fund for the Central Universities

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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