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Anthrax toxins regulate pain signaling and can deliver molecular cargoes into ANTXR2 + DRG sensory neurons.

Nicole J YangJoerg IsenseeDylan V NeelAndreza U QuadrosHan-Xiong Bear ZhangJustas LauzadisSai Man LiuStephanie ShiersAndreea BeluShilpa PalanSandra MarlinJacquie MaignelAngela Kennedy-CurranVictoria S TongMahtab MoayeriPascal RödererAnja NitzscheMike LuBradley L PenteluteOliver BrüstleVineeta TripathiKeith A FosterTheodore John PriceR John CollierStephen H LepplaMichelino PuopoloBruce P BeanThiago M CunhaTim HuchoIsaac M Chiu
Published in: Nature neuroscience (2021)
Bacterial products can act on neurons to alter signaling and function. In the present study, we found that dorsal root ganglion (DRG) sensory neurons are enriched for ANTXR2, the high-affinity receptor for anthrax toxins. Anthrax toxins are composed of protective antigen (PA), which binds to ANTXR2, and the protein cargoes edema factor (EF) and lethal factor (LF). Intrathecal administration of edema toxin (ET (PA + EF)) targeted DRG neurons and induced analgesia in mice. ET inhibited mechanical and thermal sensation, and pain caused by formalin, carrageenan or nerve injury. Analgesia depended on ANTXR2 expressed by Na v 1.8 + or Advillin + neurons. ET modulated protein kinase A signaling in mouse sensory and human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived sensory neurons, and attenuated spinal cord neurotransmission. We further engineered anthrax toxins to introduce exogenous protein cargoes, including botulinum toxin, into DRG neurons to silence pain. Our study highlights interactions between a bacterial toxin and nociceptors, which may lead to the development of new pain therapeutics.
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