The distinct organization of Kv2 voltage-gated potassium channels on and near the cell body of brain neurons enables their regulation of action potentials and specialized membrane contact sites. Somatosensory neurons have a pseudo unipolar morphology that allows transmitted action potentials to bypass the cell body. Kv2 channels regulate action potentials in somatosensory neurons, yet little is known about where Kv2 channels are located. Here we define the cellular and subcellular localization of the Kv2 paralogs, Kv2.1 and Kv2.2, in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) somatosensory neurons with a panel of antibodies, cell markers, and genetically modified mice. We find that relative to spinal cord neurons, DRG neurons have similar levels of detectable Kv2.1, and higher levels of Kv2.2. In older mice, detectable Kv2.2 remains similar while detectable Kv2.1 decreases. Both Kv2 subtypes adopt clustered subcellular patterns that are distinct from central neurons. Kv2.2 is distinct in being found at juxtaparanodes and paranodes of myelinated axons. Most DRG neurons co-express Kv2.1 and Kv2.2, although neuron subpopulations show preferential expression of Kv2.1 or Kv2.2. We find that Kv2 protein expression and subcellular localization is similar between mouse and human DRG neurons. We conclude that the organization of both Kv2 channels is consistent with physiological roles in the somata and stem axons of DRG neurons. The general prevalence of Kv2.2 in DRG as compared to central neurons and the enrichment of Kv2.2 relative to detectable Kv2.1, in older mice, proprioceptors, and myelinated axons suggest more widespread roles for Kv2.2 in DRG neurons.Significance statementThe subcellular distribution of Kv2 voltage-gated potassium channels enable compartment-specific modulation of membrane excitability and organization of membrane contact sites. Here we identify subcellular distributions of the Kv2 paralogs, Kv2.1 and Kv2.2, in somatosensory neurons that bear similarities to and distinctions from central neurons. The distribution of Kv2 channels is similar in mouse and human somatosensory neurons. These results identify unique locations of Kv2 channels in somatosensory neurons that could enable roles in sensory information processing.
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