Abstract

Carbonic anhydrase-8 (CA8) is an intracellular protein that functions as an allosteric inhibitor of inositol trisphosphate receptor-1 (ITPR1) critical to intracellular Ca++ release, synaptic functions and neuronal excitability. We showed previously that murine nociception and analgesic responses are regulated by the expression of this gene in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) associated with a cis-eQTL. In this report, we identify an exon-level cis-eQTL (rs6471859) that regulates human DRG CA8 alternative splicing, producing a truncated 1,697bp transcript (e.g., CA8-204). Our functional genomic studies show the “G” allele at rs6471859 produces a cryptic 3’UTR splice site regulating expression of CA8-204. We developed constructs to study the expression and function of the naturally occurring CA8-204G transcript (G allele at rs6471859), CA8-204C (C allele at rs6471859 reversion mutation) and CA8-201 (full length transcript). CA8-204G transcript expression occurred predominantly in non-neuronal cells (HEK293), while CA8-204C expression was restricted to neuronal derived cells (NBL) in vitro. CA8-204G produced a stable truncated transcript in HEK293 cells that was barely detectable in NBL cells. We also show CA8-204 produces a stable peptide that inhibits pITPR1 and Ca++ release in HEK293 cells. These results imply homozygous G/G individuals at rs6471859, which are common in the general population, produce exclusively CA8-204G that is barely detectable in neuronal cells. CA8 null mutations that greatly impact neuronal functions are associated with severe forms of spinal cerebellar ataxia, and our data suggest G/G homozygotes should display a similar phenotype. To address this question, we show in vivo using AAV8-FLAG-CA8-204G and AAV8-V5-CA8-201 gene transfer delivered via intra-neural sciatic nerve injection (SN), that these viral constructs are able to transduce DRG cells and produce similar analgesic and anti-hyperalgesic responses to inflammatory pain. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) examinations of DRG tissues further show CA8-204G peptide is expressed in advillin expressing neuronal cells, but to a lesser extent compared to glial cells. These findings explain why G/G homozygotes that exclusively produce this truncated functional peptide in DRG evade a severe phenotype. These genomic studies significantly advance the literature regarding structure-function studies on CA8-ITPR1 critical to calcium signaling pathways, synaptic functioning, neuronal excitability and analgesic responses.

Highlights

  • Car8 and its human ortholog (CA8) are enzymatically inactive isoforms of carbonic anhydrase that inhibit activation of neuronal inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor type-1 (ITPR1) by phosphorylation, and intracellular calcium release in mice

  • Carbonic anhydrase-8 (CA8) inhibits IP3 binding to the inositol trisphosphate receptor-1 (ITPR1), which regulates intracellular calcium signaling critical to neuronal functions

  • We have previously demonstrated that nociception and analgesic responses are associated with a dorsal root ganglion (DRG) cis-eQTL that regulates murine expression of this gene

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Summary

Introduction

Car and its human ortholog (CA8) are enzymatically inactive isoforms of carbonic anhydrase that inhibit activation of neuronal inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor type-1 (ITPR1) by phosphorylation (pITPR1), and intracellular calcium release in mice. Hirota et al, (2003) determined essentially all 8 exons of Car (amino acids 45–291 of Car8-201) are minimally required for the direct binding to the modulatory domain of ITPR1 (amino acids 1,387–1,647) [3]. They showed Car acts as an allosteric inhibitor of IP3 binding to ITPR1, thereby inhibiting calcium signaling. We reported Car8/CA8 gene therapy was analgesic and anti-hyperalgesic in animal models of pain [5, 6]. In order to quantify analgesic responses observed in animal models after Car8/CA8 gene therapy, we used

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