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Review
. 2016 May;22(5):377-390.
doi: 10.1016/j.molmed.2016.03.008. Epub 2016 Apr 13.

Sodium Channels, Mitochondria, and Axonal Degeneration in Peripheral Neuropathy

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Review

Sodium Channels, Mitochondria, and Axonal Degeneration in Peripheral Neuropathy

Anna-Karin Persson et al. Trends Mol Med. 2016 May.

Abstract

Peripheral neuropathy results from damage to peripheral nerves and is often accompanied by pain in affected limbs. Treatment represents an unmet medical need and a thorough understanding of the mechanisms underlying axonal injury is needed. Longer nerve fibers tend to degenerate first (length-dependence), and patients carrying pathogenic mutations throughout life usually become symptomatic in mid- or late-life (time-dependence). The activity of voltage-gated sodium channels can contribute to axonal injury and sodium channel gain-of-function mutations have been linked to peripheral neuropathy. Recent studies have implicated sodium channel activity, mitochondrial compromise, and reverse-mode Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange in time- and length-dependent axonal injury. Elucidation of molecular mechanisms underlying axonal injury in peripheral neuropathy may provide new therapeutic strategies for this painful and debilitating condition.

Keywords: axonal degeneration; bioenergetics; mitochondria; neuropathy; sodium channel.

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