Voltage-gated potassium channel subfamily q member 4 (Kcnq4) is predominantly expressed by hair cells and auditory neurons and regulates the neuronal excitability in the auditory pathway. Although it is further detected in myelinated large-diameter dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons in the periphery, the expression and function of Kcnq4 channel in nociceptors remains unknown. Here we showed that Kcnq4 is substantially expressed by unmyelinated small-diameter DRG neurons in both human and mouse. In spite of a dispensable role in acute pain and chronic skin inflammation, Kcnq4 is specifically involved in the regulation of scratching behavior through controlling action potential firing properties, evidenced by the increased neuronal excitability in small-diameter DRG neurons isolated from Kcnq4 deficient mice. Moreover, genetic ablation of Kcnq4 in Trpv1-positive neurons exacerbates both acute and chronic itch behavior in mice. Taken together, our results uncover a functional role of Trpv1-lineage neuron-expressing Kcnq4 channel in the modulation of itch-specific neuronal excitation in the periphery.
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