Abstract
Exon/intron boundaries in the regions encoding the trans-membrane segments of voltage-gated Na channel genes are conserved, supporting their proposed evolution from a single domain channel, while the exons encoding the cytoplasmic loops are less conserved with their evolutionary heritage being less defined. SCN11A encodes the tetrodotoxin-resistant “TTX-R” sodium channel Nav 1.9a/NaN, which is preferentially expressed in nociceptive primary sensory neurons of dorsal root ganglia “DRG” and trigeminal ganglia. SCN11A is localized to human chromosome 3 “3p21-24” close to the other TTX-R sodium channel genes SCN5A and SCN10A. An alternative transcript, Nav1.9b, has been detected in rat DRG and trigeminal ganglion. Nav1.9b is predicted to produce a truncated protein due to a frame-shift, which is introduced by the new sequence of exon 23c “E23c”. In human and mouse SCN11A, divergent splicing signals prevent utilization of E23c. Unlike exons 5A/N in genes encoding TTX-sensitive sodium channels, which appear to have resulted from exon duplication, E23c might have evolved from the conversion of an intronic sequence. Although a functional role for Nav1.9b has yet to be established, intron-to-exon conversion may represent a mechanism for ion channels to acquire novel features.
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Dib-Hajj, S. D., Tyrrell, L., & Waxman, S. G. (2002). Structure of the sodium channel gene SCN11A: Evidence for intron-to-exon conversion model and implications for gene evolution. Molecular Neurobiology, 26(2–3), 235–250. https://doi.org/10.1385/MN:26:2-3:235
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