Running title: Loss of claudin-12 results in mechanical hypersensitivity.
AbstractPeripheral nerves and their axons are shielded by the blood-nerve and the myelin barrier, but understanding of how these barriers impact nociception is limited. Here, we identified a regulatory axis of the tight junction protein claudin-12, sex-dependently controlling perineurial and myelin barrier integrity. In nerve biopsies, claudin-12 in Schwann cells was lost in male and postmenopausal female patients with painful but not painless polyneuropathy. Global Cldn12 gene-knockout selectively increased perineurial/myelin barrier leakage, damaged tight junction protein expression and morphology, increased proinflammatory cytokines and induced mechanical hypersensitivity in naïve and neuropathic male mice, respectively. Other barriers and neurological function remained intact. In vitro transfection studies documented claudin-12 plasma membrane localisation without interaction with other tight junction proteins or intrinsic sealing properties. Rather, claudin-12 had a regulatory tight junction protein function on the myelin barrier via the morphogen SHH in vivo in Cldn12-KO and after local siRNA knockdown. Fertile female mice were completely protected. Collectively, these studies reveal the critical role of claudin-12 maintaining the myelin barrier and highlight restoration of the claudin-12/SHH pathway as a potential target for painful neuropathy. 5