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    Home > Biochemistry News > Biotechnology News > Science: Oversensitive sensory neurons can lead to joint deformities

    Science: Oversensitive sensory neurons can lead to joint deformities

    • Last Update: 2023-02-01
    • Source: Internet
    • Author: User
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    Researchers report that excessive mechanical sensation in neurons disrupts musculoskeletal development, leading to joint deformities such as joint contractures
    .
    Their study also demonstrates the notion that reducing this enhanced sensory neuron activity at a critical age (via Botox or a special diet) may be a viable way to treat certain musculoskeletal disorders in a non-invasive way
    .

    Distal joint contracture (DA) is a condition characterized by congenital joint deformities or contractures that usually limit movement of the hands and feet, and is estimated to affect one in every 3,000 people worldwide
    .
    Reducing symptoms usually requires invasive surgery
    .
    While genetic mutations associated with muscle and joint function are associated with DA, gain-of-function mutations in PIEZO2 – the primary mechanical sensor in sensory neurons – were found in patients with DA subtype 5 (DA5), which underlies
    touch, proprioception, and other mechanosensory processes.
    However, the mechanism by which PIEZO2 mutations lead to DA is unclear
    .

    Using mouse models, a team of researchers found that overexpression of the mutant Piezo2 function-acquired allele in proprioceptive neurons that disable muscles and tendons during the critical postnatal period during development can lead to joint contractures
    .
    These defects are not caused
    when dysfunctional alleles are expressed in skeletal muscle, cartilage, or tendons.
    According to Ma et al.
    , dietary fatty acids commonly found in botulinum injections and fish can reduce joint and tendon defects
    .

    "The study by Ma et al.
    provides exciting new insights into the mechanism by which DA occurs," Urich Müller wrote
    in a related viewpoint.
    "It is reassuring to find that expression of the function-acquired allele of Piezo2 does not cause DA symptoms in young adult mice
    .
    It narrows the window of time for potential therapeutic interventions, which may lead to lifelong improvement
    in affected patients.

    Excessive mechanotransduction in sensory neurons causes joint contractures


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