New analgesic drugs are necessary because a number of pain states are untreatable. Genetic approaches to the identification of analgesic drug targets include mapping genes involved in human pain perception (e.g., trkA involved in hereditary neuropathies), identifying regulators of sensory neuron function in simple multicellular organisms and then investigating the activity of their mammalian homologs (e.g., POU domain transcription factors that specify sensory cell fate), as well as difference, expression, and homology cloning of receptors, ion channels, and transcription factors present in sensory neurons. After target validation through the construction of null mutant mice, high-throughput cell-based screens can be used to identify potential drug candidates. As a result of these approaches, a number of receptors and ion channels present in sensory neurons such as voltage-gated sodium channels [sensory neuron specific (SNS) and Na channel novel] and ATP-gated (P2X3), capsaicin-gated [vanilloid receptor 1(VR1)], and proton-gated [acid-sensing ion channel (ASIC)] channels are now under investigation as potential new analgesic drug targets.