[HTML][HTML] Expression pattern analysis and characterization of the hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy 2 A (HSAN2A) gene with no lysine kinase (WNK1) in …

MR Sapio, DM King, ES Staedtler, D Maric… - Experimental …, 2023 - Elsevier
MR Sapio, DM King, ES Staedtler, D Maric, J Jahanipour, NA Kurochkina, AP Manalo…
Experimental Neurology, 2023Elsevier
Inherited painless neuropathies arise due to genetic insults that either block the normal
signaling of or destroy the sensory afferent neurons in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG)
responsible for transducing noxious stimuli. Complete loss of these neurons leads to
profound insensitivity to all sensory modalities including pain. Hereditary sensory and
autonomic neuropathy type 2 (HSNAII) is a rare genetic neuropathy characterized by a
progressive distal early onset sensory loss. This syndrome is caused by autosomal …
Abstract
Inherited painless neuropathies arise due to genetic insults that either block the normal signaling of or destroy the sensory afferent neurons in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) responsible for transducing noxious stimuli. Complete loss of these neurons leads to profound insensitivity to all sensory modalities including pain. Hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy type 2 (HSNAII) is a rare genetic neuropathy characterized by a progressive distal early onset sensory loss. This syndrome is caused by autosomal recessive mutations in the with-no-lysine protein kinase 1 (WNK1) serine-threonine kinase gene. Of interest, disease-associated mutations are found in the large exon, termed “HSN2,” which encodes a 498 amino acid domain C-terminal to the kinase domain. These mutations lead to truncation of the HSN2-containing proteins through the addition of an early stop codon (nonsense mutation) leading to loss of the C-terminal domains of this large protein. The present study evaluates the transcripts, gene structure, and protein structure of HSN2-containing WNK1 splice variants in DRG and spinal cord in order to establish the basal expression patterns of WNK1 and HSN2-containing WNK1 splice variants using multiplex fluorescent situ hybridization. We hypothesized that these transcripts would be enriched in pain-sensing DRG neurons, and, potentially, that enrichment in nociceptive neurons was responsible for the painless phenotypes observed. However, our in-depth analyses revealed that the HSN2-WNK1 splice variants were ubiquitously expressed but were not enriched in tachykinin 1-expressing C-fiber neurons, a class of neurons with a highly nociceptive character. We subsequently identified other subpopulations of DRG neurons with higher levels of HSN2-WNK1 expression, including mechanosensory large fibers. These data are inconsistent with the hypothesis that this transcript is enriched in nociceptive fibers, and instead suggest it may be related to general axon maintenance, or that nociceptive fibers are more sensitive to the genetic insult. These findings clarify the molecular and cellular expression pattern of this painless neuropathy gene in human tissue.
Elsevier