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Modulatory effects of bufalin,an active ingredient from toad venom on voltage-gated sodium channels
Authors:Jie Tao  Feng Jiang  Cheng Liu  Zhirui Liu  Yudan Zhu  Jian Xu  Yiqin Ge  Kan Xu  Peihao Yin
Affiliation:1.Department of Central Laboratory and Neurosurgery, Putuo Hospital,Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine,Shanghai,China;2.Xinhua Hospital (Chongming) Affiliated to Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine,Shanghai Chongming Xinhua Translational Medical Institute for Cancer Pain,Shanghai,China;3.Department of Pharmacology, Institute of Medical Science,Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine,Shanghai,China
Abstract:Chan-su (toad venom) has been used as an analgesic agent in China from ancient to modern times. Bufalin, a non-peptide toxin extracted from toad venom, is considered as one of the analgesic components. The molecular mechanism underlying the anti-nociceptive effects of bufalin remains unclear so far. In this study, we investigated the pharmacological effects of bufalin on pain-related ion channels as well as animal models through patch clamping, calcium imaging and animal behavior observation. Using the whole-cell recording, bufalin caused remarkable suppressive effect on the peak currents of Nav channels (voltage gated sodium channels, VGSCs) of dorsal root ganglion neuroblastomas (ND7-23 cell) in a dose-dependent manner. Bufalin facilitated the voltage-dependent activation and induced a negative shift on the fast inactivation of VGSCs. The recovery kinetics of VGSCs were significantly slowed and the recovery proportion were reduced after administering bufalin. However, bufalin prompted no significant effect not only on Kv4.2, Kv4.3 and BK channels heterologously expressed in HEK293T cells, but also on the capsaicin and allyl isothiocyanate induced Ca2+ influx. What’s more, bufalin could observably relieve formalin-induced spontaneous flinching and licking response as well as carrageenan-induced thermal and mechanical hyperalgesia in dose-dependent manner in agreement with the results of in vitro experiments. The present results imply that the remarkable anti-nociceptive effects produced by bufalin are probably ascribed to its specific regulation on Nav channels. Bufalin inhibits the Nav channels in a dose-dependent manner, which will provide references for the optimal dose selection of analgesia drugs.
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