Balser J R, Nuss H B, Romashko D N, Marban E, Tomaselli G F
Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
J Gen Physiol. 1996 May;107(5):643-58. doi: 10.1085/jgp.107.5.643.
Na channels open upon depolarization but then enter inactivated states from which they cannot readily reopen. After brief depolarizations, native channels enter a fast-inactivated state from which recovery at hyperpolarized potentials is rapid (< 20 ms). Prolonged depolarization induces a slow-inactivated state that requires much longer periods for recovery (> 1 s). The slow-inactivated state therefore assumes particular importance in pathological conditions, such as ischemia, in which tissues are depolarized for prolonged periods. While use-dependent block of Na channels by local anesthetics has been explained on the basis of delayed recovery of fast-inactivated Na channels, the potential contribution of slow-inactivated channels has been ignored. The principal (alpha) subunits from skeletal muscle or brain Na channels display anomalous gating behavior when expressed in Xenopus oocytes, with a high percentage entering slow-inactivated states after brief depolarizations. This enhanced slow inactivation is eliminated by coexpressing the alpha subunit with the subsidiary beta 1 subunit. We compared the lidocaine sensitivity of alpha subunits expressed in the presence and absence of the beta 1 subunit to determine the relative contributions of fast-inactivated and slow-inactivated channel block. Coexpression of beta 1 inhibited the use-dependent accumulation of lidocaine block during repetitive (1-Hz) depolarizations from -100 to -20 mV. Therefore, the time required for recovery from inactivated channel block was measured at -100 mV. Fast-inactivated (alpha + beta 1) channels were mostly unblocked within 1 s of repolarization; however, slow-inactivated (alpha alone) channels remained blocked for much longer repriming intervals (> 5 s). The affinity of the slow-inactivated state for lidocaine was estimated to be 15-25 microM, versus 24 microM for the fast-inactivated state. We conclude that slow-inactivated Na channels are blocked by lidocaine with an affinity comparable to that of fast-inactivated channels. A prominent functional consequence is potentiation of use-dependent block through a delay in repriming of lidocaine-bound slow-inactivated channels.
钠通道在去极化时开放,但随后进入失活状态,无法轻易重新开放。短暂去极化后,天然通道进入快速失活状态,在超极化电位下恢复迅速(<20毫秒)。长时间去极化会诱导缓慢失活状态,恢复需要更长时间(>1秒)。因此,缓慢失活状态在诸如缺血等病理状况中尤为重要,在这些情况下组织会长时间去极化。虽然局部麻醉药对钠通道的使用依赖性阻滞已基于快速失活钠通道的延迟恢复得到解释,但缓慢失活通道的潜在作用却被忽视了。骨骼肌或脑钠通道的主要(α)亚基在非洲爪蟾卵母细胞中表达时表现出异常的门控行为,短暂去极化后有很高比例进入缓慢失活状态。与辅助β1亚基共表达α亚基可消除这种增强的缓慢失活。我们比较了在有和没有β1亚基存在时表达的α亚基对利多卡因的敏感性,以确定快速失活和缓慢失活通道阻滞的相对作用。β1亚基的共表达抑制了在从-100到-20毫伏的重复(1赫兹)去极化过程中利多卡因阻滞的使用依赖性积累。因此,在-100毫伏下测量了从失活通道阻滞中恢复所需的时间。快速失活的(α+β1)通道在复极化1秒内大多未被阻滞;然而,缓慢失活的(仅α)通道在更长的再激活间隔(>5秒)内仍被阻滞。缓慢失活状态对利多卡因的亲和力估计为15 - 25微摩尔,而快速失活状态为24微摩尔。我们得出结论,缓慢失活的钠通道被利多卡因阻滞的亲和力与快速失活通道相当。一个突出的功能后果是通过延迟与利多卡因结合的缓慢失活通道的再激活来增强使用依赖性阻滞。