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HDAC4 is required for inflammation-associated thermal hypersensitivity.

FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (2015-04-24)
Megan Crow, Nikita Khovanov, Jayne H Kelleher, Simone Sharma, Andrew D Grant, Yury Bogdanov, John N Wood, Stephen B McMahon, Franziska Denk
ABSTRACT

Transcriptional alterations are characteristic of persistent pain states, but the key regulators remain elusive. HDAC4 is a transcriptional corepressor that has been linked to synaptic plasticity and neuronal excitability, mechanisms that may be involved in peripheral and central sensitization. Using a conditional knockout (cKO) strategy in mice, we sought to determine whether the loss of HDAC4 would have implications for sensory neuron transcription and nociception. HDAC4 was found to be largely unnecessary for transcriptional regulation of naïve sensory neurons but was essential for appropriate transcriptional responses after injury, with Calca and Trpv1 expression consistently down-regulated in HDAC4 cKO compared to levels in the littermate controls (0.2-0.44-fold change, n = 4 in 2 separate experiments). This down-regulation corresponded to reduced sensitivity to 100 nM capsaicin in vitro (IC50 = 230 ± 20 nM, 76 ± 4.4% wild-type capsaicin responders vs. 56.9 ± 4.7% HDAC4 cKO responders) and to reduced thermal hypersensitivity in the complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) model of inflammatory pain (1.3-1.4-fold improvement over wild-type controls; n = 5-12, in 2 separate experiments). These data indicate that HDAC4 is a novel inflammatory pain mediator and may be a good therapeutic target, capable of orchestrating the regulation of multiple downstream effectors.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Histone Deacetylase 5 (HDAC5) antibody, Mouse monoclonal, clone HDAC5-35, purified from hybridoma cell culture