CW
Clifford J. Woolf
  • F.M. Kirby Neurobiology Center, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston
Implementation of a Drug Screening Platform to Target Gch1 Expression in Injured Mouse Dorsal Root Ganglion Neurons
在受损小鼠背根神经节神经元中靶向Gch1表达的药物筛选平台的实现

Management of neuropathic pain is notoriously difficult; current analgesics, including anti-inflammatory- and opioid-based medications, are generally ineffective and can pose serious side effects. There is a need to uncover non-addictive and safe analgesics to combat neuropathic pain. Here, we describe the setup of a phenotypic screen whereby the expression of an algesic gene, Gch1, is targeted. GCH1 is the rate-limiting enzyme in the de novo synthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), a metabolite linked to neuropathic pain in both animal models and in human chronic pain sufferers. Gch1 is induced in sensory neurons after nerve injury and its upregulation is responsible for increased BH4 levels. GCH1 protein has proven to be a difficult enzyme to pharmacologically target with small molecule inhibition. Thus, by establishing a platform to monitor and target induced Gch1 expression in individual injured dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons in vitro, we can screen for compounds that regulate its expression levels. This approach also allows us to gain valuable biological insights into the pathways and signals regulating GCH1 and BH4 levels upon nerve injury. This protocol is compatible with any transgenic reporter system in which the expression of an algesic gene (or multiple genes) can be monitored fluorescently. Such an approach can be scaled up for high-throughput compound screening and is amenable to transgenic mice as well as human stem cell–derived sensory neurons.


Graphical overview


Isolation of Nuclei from Mouse Dorsal Root Ganglia for Single-nucleus Genomics
小鼠背根神经节细胞核的分离及其单核基因组学研究
作者:Lite Yang, Ivan Tochitsky, Clifford J. Woolf and William Renthal日期:08/05/2021,浏览量:3478,Q&A: 0

Primary somatosensory neurons, whose cell bodies reside in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) and trigeminal ganglion, are specialized to transmit sensory information from the periphery to the central nervous system. Our molecular understanding of peripheral sensory neurons has been limited by both their heterogeneity and low abundance compared with non-neuronal cell types in sensory ganglia. We describe a protocol to isolate nuclei from mouse DRGs using iodixanol density gradient centrifugation, which enriches for neuronal nuclei while still sampling non-neuronal cells such as satellite glia and Schwann cells. This protocol is compatible with a range of downstream applications such as single-nucleus transcriptional and epigenomic assays.