Propofol inhibits the voltage-gated sodium channel NaChBac at multiple sites

Author:

Wang Yali1,Yang Elaine2ORCID,Wells Marta M.13,Bondarenko Vasyl1,Woll Kellie4,Carnevale Vincenzo5ORCID,Granata Daniele5,Klein Michael L.5,Eckenhoff Roderic G.4,Dailey William P.6ORCID,Covarrubias Manuel2ORCID,Tang Pei137,Xu Yan1789ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anesthesiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA

2. Department of Neuroscience and Vickie and Jack Farber Institute for Neuroscience, Sidney Kimmel Medical College and Jefferson College of Biomedical Sciences, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA

3. Department of Computational and Systems Biology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA

4. Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

5. Institute for Computational Molecular Science, College of Science and Technology, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA

6. Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

7. Department of Pharmacology and Chemical Biology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA

8. Department of Structural Biology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA

9. Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA

Abstract

Voltage-gated sodium (NaV) channels are important targets of general anesthetics, including the intravenous anesthetic propofol. Electrophysiology studies on the prokaryotic NaV channel NaChBac have demonstrated that propofol promotes channel activation and accelerates activation-coupled inactivation, but the molecular mechanisms of these effects are unclear. Here, guided by computational docking and molecular dynamics simulations, we predict several propofol-binding sites in NaChBac. We then strategically place small fluorinated probes at these putative binding sites and experimentally quantify the interaction strengths with a fluorinated propofol analogue, 4-fluoropropofol. In vitro and in vivo measurements show that 4-fluoropropofol and propofol have similar effects on NaChBac function and nearly identical anesthetizing effects on tadpole mobility. Using quantitative analysis by 19F-NMR saturation transfer difference spectroscopy, we reveal strong intermolecular cross-relaxation rate constants between 4-fluoropropofol and four different regions of NaChBac, including the activation gate and selectivity filter in the pore, the voltage sensing domain, and the S4–S5 linker. Unlike volatile anesthetics, 4-fluoropropofol does not bind to the extracellular interface of the pore domain. Collectively, our results show that propofol inhibits NaChBac at multiple sites, likely with distinct modes of action. This study provides a molecular basis for understanding the net inhibitory action of propofol on NaV channels.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Physiology

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