Background: Members of the degenerin/epithelial (DEG/ENaC) sodium channel family are mechanosensors in C
elegans, and Nav1.7 and Nav1.8 voltage-gated sodium channel knockout mice have major deficits in
mechanosensation. b and gENaC sodium channel subunits are present with acid sensing ion channels (ASICs) in
mammalian sensory neurons of the dorsal root ganglia (DRG). The extent to which epithelial or voltage-gated
sodium channels are involved in transduction of mechanical stimuli is unclear.
Results: Here we show that deleting b and gENaC sodium channels in sensory neurons does not result in
mechanosensory behavioural deficits. We had shown previously that Nav1.7/Nav1.8 double knockout mice have
major deficits in behavioural responses to noxious mechanical pressure. However, all classes of mechanically
activated currents in DRG neurons are unaffected by deletion of the two sodium channels. In contrast, the ability
of Nav1.7/Nav1.8 knockout DRG neurons to generate action potentials is compromised with 50% of the small
diameter sensory neurons unable to respond to electrical stimulation in vitro.
Conclusion: Behavioural deficits in Nav1.7/Nav1.8 knockout mice reflects a failure of action potential propagation
in a mechanosensitive set of sensory neurons rather than a loss of primary transduction currents. DEG/ENaC
sodium channels are not mechanosensors in mouse sensory neuron