Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Internal Medicine (Cardiology) (D.A.H., E.N., M.M.M., H.A.F., G.M.L., M.F.S.), University of Chicago, Ill; and the Department of Internal Medicine (M.F.S.), The Nora Eccles Harrison Cardiovascular Research and Teaching Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City.
Abstract
Rationale
:
Lidocaine and other antiarrhythmic drugs bind in the inner pore of voltage-gated Na channels and affect gating use-dependently. A phenylalanine in domain IV, S6 (Phe1759 in Na
V
1.5), modeled to face the inner pore just below the selectivity filter, is critical in use-dependent drug block.
Objective
:
Measurement of gating currents and concentration-dependent availability curves to determine the role of Phe1759 in coupling of drug binding to the gating changes.
Methods and Results
:
The measurements showed that replacement of Phe1759 with a nonaromatic residue permits clear separation of action of lidocaine and benzocaine into 2 components that can be related to channel conformations. One component represents the drug acting as a voltage-independent, low-affinity blocker of closed channels (designated as lipophilic block), and the second represents high-affinity, voltage-dependent block of open/inactivated channels linked to stabilization of the S4s in domains III and IV (designated as voltage-sensor inhibition) by Phe1759. A homology model for how lidocaine and benzocaine bind in the closed and open/inactivated channel conformation is proposed.
Conclusions
:
These 2 components, lipophilic block and voltage-sensor inhibition, can explain the differences in estimates between tonic and open-state/inactivated-state affinities, and they identify how differences in affinity for the 2 binding conformations can control use-dependence, the hallmark of successful antiarrhythmic drugs.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
62 articles.
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