2021
KCNQ variants and pain modulation: a missense variant in Kv7.3 contributes to pain resilience
Yuan JH, Estacion M, Mis MA, Tanaka BS, Schulman BR, Chen L, Liu S, Dib-Hajj FB, Dib-Hajj SD, Waxman SG. KCNQ variants and pain modulation: a missense variant in Kv7.3 contributes to pain resilience. Brain Communications 2021, 3: fcab212-. PMID: 34557669, PMCID: PMC8454204, DOI: 10.1093/braincomms/fcab212.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPluripotent stem cell-derived sensory neuronsNav1.7 mutationSensory neuronsPain ProfilePain phenotypesPain resilienceDorsal root ganglion neuronsDaily pain diaryPeripheral sensory neuronsMissense variantsVoltage-clamp recordingsSodium channel Nav1.7Different pain experiencesPotential genetic factorsWhole-exome sequencingLarger M-currentsErythromelalgia patientsNeuropathic painPain episodesModerate painPain diaryPain modulationSevere painInter-individual variabilityGanglion neurons
2018
Atypical changes in DRG neuron excitability and complex pain phenotype associated with a Nav1.7 mutation that massively hyperpolarizes activation
Huang J, Mis MA, Tanaka B, Adi T, Estacion M, Liu S, Walker S, Dib-Hajj SD, Waxman SG. Atypical changes in DRG neuron excitability and complex pain phenotype associated with a Nav1.7 mutation that massively hyperpolarizes activation. Scientific Reports 2018, 8: 1811. PMID: 29379075, PMCID: PMC5788866, DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-20221-7.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsNav1.7 mutationClinical presentationDRG neuronsPain sensationDorsal root ganglion neuronsDRG neuron excitabilityFunction Nav1.7 mutationsLoss of excitabilityAbsence of painSodium channel Nav1.7Function mutationsComplex pain phenotypesEpisodic painSevere painCorneal anesthesiaGanglion neuronsNeuron excitabilityClinical lossPain phenotypesPainChannel Nav1.7Atypical changesNav1.7 channelsClinical levelNeurons
2013
Burn injury-induced mechanical allodynia is maintained by Rac1-regulated dendritic spine dysgenesis
Tan AM, Samad OA, Liu S, Bandaru S, Zhao P, Waxman SG. Burn injury-induced mechanical allodynia is maintained by Rac1-regulated dendritic spine dysgenesis. Experimental Neurology 2013, 248: 509-519. PMID: 23933578, DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2013.07.017.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsDendritic spine dysgenesisWDR neuronsNeuropathic painBurn injurySpine dysgenesisMechanical allodyniaInjury-induced chronic painInjury-induced mechanical allodyniaSpinal cord dorsal hornBurn-injured animalsHindpaw receptive fieldsInjury-induced painNeuropathic pain phenotypesSecond-degree burn injurySecond-degree burn modelDendritic spine morphologyDendritic spine shapeDorsal hornIntractable painMechanical painPain managementChronic painPain phenotypesElectrophysiological signsPreclinical models