Quan C, Mok W M, Wang G K
Department of Anesthesia Research Laboratories, Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Biophys J. 1996 Jan;70(1):194-201. doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(96)79563-2.
Most local anesthetics (LAs) elicit use-dependent inhibition of Na+ currents when excitable membranes are stimulated repetitively. One exception to this rule is benzocaine, a neutral LA that fails to produce appreciable use-dependent inhibition. In this study, we have examined the use-dependent phenomenon of three benzocaine homologs: ethyl 4-diethylaminobenzoate, ethyl 4-ethoxybenzoate, and ethyl 4-hydroxybenzoate. Ethyl 4-hydroxybenzoate at 1 mM, like benzocaine, elicited little use-dependent inhibition of Na+ currents, whereas ethyl 4-diethylaminobenzoate at 0.15 mM and ethyl 4-ethoxybenzoate at 0.5 mM elicited substantial use-dependent inhibition--up to 55% of peak Na+ currents were inhibited by repetitive depolarizations at 5 Hz. Each of these compounds produced significant tonic block of Na+ currents at rest and shifted the steady-state inactivation curve (h infinity) toward the hyperpolarizing direction. Kinetic analyses showed that the decaying phase of Na+ currents during a depolarizing pulse was significantly accelerated by all drugs, thus suggesting that these drugs also block the activated channel. The recovery time course for the use-dependent inhibition of Na+ currents was relatively slow, with time constants of 6.8 and 4.4 s for ethyl 4-diethylaminobenzoate and ethyl 4-ethoxybenzoate, respectively. We conclude that benzocaine and 4-hydroxybenzoate interact with the open and inactivated channels during repetitive pulses, but during the interpulse the complex dissociates too fast to accumulate sufficient use-dependent block of Na+ currents. In contrast, ethyl 4-diethylaminobenzoate and ethyl 4-ethoxybenzoate dissociate slowly from their binding site and consequently elicit significant use-dependent block. A common LA binding site suffices to explain the presence and absence of use-dependent block by benzocaine homologs during repetitive pulses.
大多数局部麻醉药(LAs)在可兴奋膜受到重复刺激时会引起对Na⁺电流的使用依赖性抑制。这条规则的一个例外是苯佐卡因,一种中性局部麻醉药,它不会产生明显的使用依赖性抑制。在本研究中,我们研究了三种苯佐卡因同系物的使用依赖性现象:4-二乙氨基苯甲酸乙酯、4-乙氧基苯甲酸乙酯和4-羟基苯甲酸乙酯。1 mM的4-羟基苯甲酸乙酯与苯佐卡因一样,对Na⁺电流几乎没有引起使用依赖性抑制,而0.15 mM的4-二乙氨基苯甲酸乙酯和0.5 mM的4-乙氧基苯甲酸乙酯则引起了显著的使用依赖性抑制——在5 Hz的重复去极化作用下,高达55%的Na⁺电流峰值被抑制。这些化合物中的每一种在静息时都会对Na⁺电流产生显著的强直阻断,并使稳态失活曲线(h∞)向超极化方向移动。动力学分析表明,所有药物都显著加速了去极化脉冲期间Na⁺电流的衰减阶段,因此表明这些药物也阻断了激活的通道。Na⁺电流使用依赖性抑制的恢复时间进程相对较慢,4-二乙氨基苯甲酸乙酯和4-乙氧基苯甲酸乙酯的时间常数分别为6.8秒和4.4秒。我们得出结论,苯佐卡因和4-羟基苯甲酸在重复脉冲期间与开放和失活的通道相互作用,但在脉冲间期,复合物解离太快,无法积累足够的对Na⁺电流的使用依赖性阻断。相比之下,4-二乙氨基苯甲酸乙酯和4-乙氧基苯甲酸乙酯从其结合位点缓慢解离,因此引起显著的使用依赖性阻断。一个共同的局部麻醉药结合位点足以解释苯佐卡因同系物在重复脉冲期间使用依赖性阻断的存在和不存在。