Ahern Christopher A, Eastwood Amy L, Dougherty Dennis A, Horn Richard
Department of Molecular Physiology & Biophysics, Institute of Hyperexcitability, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Circ Res. 2008 Jan 4;102(1):86-94. doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.107.160663. Epub 2007 Oct 25.
Antiarrhythmics, anticonvulsants, and local anesthetics target voltage-gated sodium channels, decreasing excitability of nerve and muscle cells. Channel inhibition by members of this family of cationic, hydrophobic drugs relies on the presence of highly conserved aromatic residues in the pore-lining S6 segment of the fourth homologous domain of the channel. We tested whether channel inhibition was facilitated by an electrostatic attraction between lidocaine and pi electrons of the aromatic rings of these residues, namely a cation-pi interaction. To this end, we used the in vivo nonsense suppression method to incorporate a series of unnatural phenylalanine derivatives designed to systematically reduce the negative electrostatic potential on the face of the aromatic ring. In contrast to standard point mutations at the same sites, these subtly altered amino acids preserve the wild-type voltage dependence of channel activation and inactivation. Although these phenylalanine derivatives have no effect on low-affinity tonic inhibition by lidocaine or its permanently charged derivative QX-314 at any of the substituted sites, high-affinity use-dependent inhibition displays substantial cation-pi energetics for 1 residue only: Phe1579 in rNa(V)1.4. Replacement of the aromatic ring of Phe1579 by cyclohexane, for example, strongly reduces use-dependent inhibition and speeds recovery of lidocaine-engaged channels. Channel block by the neutral local anesthetic benzocaine is unaffected by the distribution of pi electrons at Phe1579, indicating that our aromatic manipulations expose electrostatic contributions to channel inhibition. These results fine tune our understanding of local anesthetic inhibition of voltage-gated sodium channels and will help the design of safer and more salutary therapeutic agents.
抗心律失常药、抗惊厥药和局部麻醉药作用于电压门控钠通道,降低神经和肌肉细胞的兴奋性。这类阳离子疏水药物家族成员对通道的抑制作用依赖于通道第四同源结构域孔内衬S6段中高度保守的芳香族残基的存在。我们测试了利多卡因与这些残基芳香环的π电子之间的静电吸引(即阳离子-π相互作用)是否有助于通道抑制。为此,我们使用体内无义抑制方法,纳入一系列非天然苯丙氨酸衍生物,旨在系统地降低芳香环表面的负静电势。与相同位点的标准点突变不同,这些细微改变的氨基酸保留了通道激活和失活的野生型电压依赖性。尽管这些苯丙氨酸衍生物在任何取代位点对利多卡因或其带永久电荷的衍生物QX-314的低亲和力强直抑制均无影响,但高亲和力使用依赖性抑制仅对1个残基显示出显著的阳离子-π能量学:rNa(V)1.4中的Phe1579。例如,用环己烷取代Phe1579的芳香环,会强烈降低使用依赖性抑制,并加速利多卡因作用的通道的恢复。中性局部麻醉药苯佐卡因对通道的阻断不受Phe1579处π电子分布的影响,这表明我们对芳香族的操作揭示了通道抑制中的静电作用。这些结果精确了我们对局部麻醉药抑制电压门控钠通道的理解,并将有助于设计更安全、更有益的治疗药物。