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Fast- or Slow-inactivated State Preference of Na(+) Channel Inhibitors: A Simulation and Experimental Study

Sodium channels are one of the most intensively studied drug targets. Sodium channel inhibitors (e.g., local anesthetics, anticonvulsants, antiarrhythmics and analgesics) exert their effect by stabilizing an inactivated conformation of the channels. Besides the fast-inactivated conformation, sodium...

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Autores principales: Karoly, Robert, Lenkey, Nora, Juhasz, Andras O., Vizi, E. Sylvester, Mike, Arpad
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2887460/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20585544
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000818
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author Karoly, Robert
Lenkey, Nora
Juhasz, Andras O.
Vizi, E. Sylvester
Mike, Arpad
author_facet Karoly, Robert
Lenkey, Nora
Juhasz, Andras O.
Vizi, E. Sylvester
Mike, Arpad
author_sort Karoly, Robert
collection PubMed
description Sodium channels are one of the most intensively studied drug targets. Sodium channel inhibitors (e.g., local anesthetics, anticonvulsants, antiarrhythmics and analgesics) exert their effect by stabilizing an inactivated conformation of the channels. Besides the fast-inactivated conformation, sodium channels have several distinct slow-inactivated conformational states. Stabilization of a slow-inactivated state has been proposed to be advantageous for certain therapeutic applications. Special voltage protocols are used to evoke slow inactivation of sodium channels. It is assumed that efficacy of a drug in these protocols indicates slow-inactivated state preference. We tested this assumption in simulations using four prototypical drug inhibitory mechanisms (fast or slow-inactivated state preference, with either fast or slow binding kinetics) and a kinetic model for sodium channels. Unexpectedly, we found that efficacy in these protocols (e.g., a shift of the “steady-state slow inactivation curve”), was not a reliable indicator of slow-inactivated state preference. Slowly associating fast-inactivated state-preferring drugs were indistinguishable from slow-inactivated state-preferring drugs. On the other hand, fast- and slow-inactivated state-preferring drugs tended to preferentially affect onset and recovery, respectively. The robustness of these observations was verified: i) by performing a Monte Carlo study on the effects of randomly modifying model parameters, ii) by testing the same drugs in a fundamentally different model and iii) by an analysis of the effect of systematically changing drug-specific parameters. In patch clamp electrophysiology experiments we tested five sodium channel inhibitor drugs on native sodium channels of cultured hippocampal neurons. For lidocaine, phenytoin and carbamazepine our data indicate a preference for the fast-inactivated state, while the results for fluoxetine and desipramine are inconclusive. We suggest that conclusions based on voltage protocols that are used to detect slow-inactivated state preference are unreliable and should be re-evaluated.
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spelling pubmed-28874602010-06-22 Fast- or Slow-inactivated State Preference of Na(+) Channel Inhibitors: A Simulation and Experimental Study Karoly, Robert Lenkey, Nora Juhasz, Andras O. Vizi, E. Sylvester Mike, Arpad PLoS Comput Biol Research Article Sodium channels are one of the most intensively studied drug targets. Sodium channel inhibitors (e.g., local anesthetics, anticonvulsants, antiarrhythmics and analgesics) exert their effect by stabilizing an inactivated conformation of the channels. Besides the fast-inactivated conformation, sodium channels have several distinct slow-inactivated conformational states. Stabilization of a slow-inactivated state has been proposed to be advantageous for certain therapeutic applications. Special voltage protocols are used to evoke slow inactivation of sodium channels. It is assumed that efficacy of a drug in these protocols indicates slow-inactivated state preference. We tested this assumption in simulations using four prototypical drug inhibitory mechanisms (fast or slow-inactivated state preference, with either fast or slow binding kinetics) and a kinetic model for sodium channels. Unexpectedly, we found that efficacy in these protocols (e.g., a shift of the “steady-state slow inactivation curve”), was not a reliable indicator of slow-inactivated state preference. Slowly associating fast-inactivated state-preferring drugs were indistinguishable from slow-inactivated state-preferring drugs. On the other hand, fast- and slow-inactivated state-preferring drugs tended to preferentially affect onset and recovery, respectively. The robustness of these observations was verified: i) by performing a Monte Carlo study on the effects of randomly modifying model parameters, ii) by testing the same drugs in a fundamentally different model and iii) by an analysis of the effect of systematically changing drug-specific parameters. In patch clamp electrophysiology experiments we tested five sodium channel inhibitor drugs on native sodium channels of cultured hippocampal neurons. For lidocaine, phenytoin and carbamazepine our data indicate a preference for the fast-inactivated state, while the results for fluoxetine and desipramine are inconclusive. We suggest that conclusions based on voltage protocols that are used to detect slow-inactivated state preference are unreliable and should be re-evaluated. Public Library of Science 2010-06-17 /pmc/articles/PMC2887460/ /pubmed/20585544 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000818 Text en Karoly et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Karoly, Robert
Lenkey, Nora
Juhasz, Andras O.
Vizi, E. Sylvester
Mike, Arpad
Fast- or Slow-inactivated State Preference of Na(+) Channel Inhibitors: A Simulation and Experimental Study
title Fast- or Slow-inactivated State Preference of Na(+) Channel Inhibitors: A Simulation and Experimental Study
title_full Fast- or Slow-inactivated State Preference of Na(+) Channel Inhibitors: A Simulation and Experimental Study
title_fullStr Fast- or Slow-inactivated State Preference of Na(+) Channel Inhibitors: A Simulation and Experimental Study
title_full_unstemmed Fast- or Slow-inactivated State Preference of Na(+) Channel Inhibitors: A Simulation and Experimental Study
title_short Fast- or Slow-inactivated State Preference of Na(+) Channel Inhibitors: A Simulation and Experimental Study
title_sort fast- or slow-inactivated state preference of na(+) channel inhibitors: a simulation and experimental study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2887460/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20585544
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000818
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