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TACAN Is an Ion Channel Involved in Sensing...
Journal article

TACAN Is an Ion Channel Involved in Sensing Mechanical Pain

Abstract

Mechanotransduction, the conversion of mechanical stimuli into electrical signals, is a fundamental process underlying essential physiological functions such as touch and pain sensing, hearing, and proprioception. Although the mechanisms for some of these functions have been identified, the molecules essential to the sense of pain have remained elusive. Here we report identification of TACAN (Tmem120A), an ion channel involved in sensing mechanical pain. TACAN is expressed in a subset of nociceptors, and its heterologous expression increases mechanically evoked currents in cell lines. Purification and reconstitution of TACAN in synthetic lipids generates a functional ion channel. Finally, a nociceptor-specific inducible knockout of TACAN decreases the mechanosensitivity of nociceptors and reduces behavioral responses to painful mechanical stimuli but not to thermal or touch stimuli. We propose that TACAN is an ion channel that contributes to sensing mechanical pain.

Authors

Beaulieu-Laroche L; Christin M; Donoghue A; Agosti F; Yousefpour N; Petitjean H; Davidova A; Stanton C; Khan U; Dietz C

Journal

Cell, Vol. 180, No. 5, pp. 956–967.e17

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

March 5, 2020

DOI

10.1016/j.cell.2020.01.033

ISSN

0092-8674

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