Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (
flushing
)
6,387
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Paroxysmal extreme pain disorder (PEPD), previously known as familial rectal pain (FRP, OMIM 167400), is an inherited disease causing intense burning rectal, ocular, and submandibular pain and
flushing
. Fertleman et al. (this issue of Neuron) show that mutations in
SCN9A
, the gene encoding the sodium channel Na(V)1.7 channels, are responsible for this syndrome. Together with earlier work implicating a distinct class of functional mutations in
SCN9A
in a distinct inherited pain syndrome, these results point to Na(V)1.7 channels as key players in signaling nociceptive information and as a potential target for drug therapy of chronic pain.
...
PMID:Painful channels. 1714 99
Paroxysmal extreme pain disorder (PEPD), previously known as familial rectal pain (FRP, or OMIM 167400), is an inherited condition characterized by paroxysms of rectal, ocular, or submandibular pain with
flushing
. A genome-wide linkage search followed by mutational analysis of the candidate gene
SCN9A
, which encodes hNa(v)1.7, identified eight missense mutations in 11 families and 2 sporadic cases. Functional analysis in vitro of three of these mutant Na(v)1.7 channels revealed a reduction in fast inactivation, leading to persistent sodium current. Other mutations in
SCN9A
associated with more negative activation thresholds are known to cause primary erythermalgia (PE). Carbamazepine, a drug that is effective in PEPD, but not PE, showed selective block of persistent current associated with PEPD mutants, but did not affect the negative activation threshold of a PE mutant. PEPD and PE are allelic variants with distinct underlying biophysical mechanisms and represent a separate class of peripheral neuronal sodium channelopathy.
...
PMID:SCN9A mutations in paroxysmal extreme pain disorder: allelic variants underlie distinct channel defects and phenotypes. 1714 94