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1.
Summary The potency to block nervous impulse of members of normal aliphatic homologous series of primary and secondary isomers of functional derivatives of alkanes was tested in bundles of a few axons from sciatic nerves of the toadBufo marinus. For the primary substituted functional derivates of pentane, the relative potency series was 1>HBr>Cl>COOCH3>F>CH2OH>COCH3>OHNH2>COOH. For the homologous series of primary alkanols, and from saturated Ringer's solutions, the time required to reversibly reduce the amplitude of the action potential to one-half its initial value were determined. The cut-off effect was detected at the level of dodecan-1-ol, while for the primary bromoalkanes it was bromooctane. However, solutions of the secondary isomer of the inactive primary homologues, such as tridecan-5-ol and tridecan-7-ol or 2-bromononane, were able to block nervous impulse conduction reversibly. From the concentration required for an equipotent effect it was calculated that the standard free energy for adsorption of primary alkanols was –705 cal mol CH2. Similarly, for primary bromoalkanes a value of –733 cal mol–1 CH2 was obtained. The concentration required for an equipotent effect for primary isomer (either of alkanols or bromoalkanes) is lower than those obtained for the secondary isomers. Therefore, the latter are less potent than the former. Among secondary isomers the potency decreases as the functional group is moved away from the terminal carbon. The differential effect of structural isomers of long-chain alkane derivates around the point of cut-off cannot be explained in terms of differences in chemical properties, concentration in aqueous and membrane phases, or mean molecular volume. It is concluded that a volume related to that of the hydrophobic region of the agent and not its mean molecular volume should be responsible for an expansion of the target region.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The voltage-dependent sodium channel from the eel electroplax was purified and reconstituted into vesicles of varying lipid composition. Isotopic sodium uptake experiments were conducted with vesicles at zero membrane potential, using veratridine to activate channels and tetrodotoxin to block them. Under these conditions, channel-dependent uptake of isotopic sodium by the vesicles was observed, demonstrating that a certain fraction of the reconstituted protein was capable of mediating ion fluxes. In addition, vesicles untreated with veratridine showed significant background uptake of sodium; a considerable proportion of this flux was blocked by tetrodotoxin. Thus these measurements showed that a significant subpopulation of channels was present that could mediate ionic fluxes in the absence of activating toxins. The proportion of channels exhibiting this behavior was dependent on the lipid composition of the vesicles and the temperature at which the uptake was measured; furthermore, the effect of temperature was reversible. However, the phenomenon was not affected by the degree of purification of the protein used for reconstitution, and channels in resealed electroplax membrane fragments or reconstituted, solely into native eel lipids did not show this behavior. The kinetics of vesicular uptake through these spontaneously-opening channels was slow, and we attribute this behavior to a modification of sodium channel inactivation.  相似文献   

3.
Voltage-gated Na(+) channels are heteromeric membrane glycoproteins responsible for the generation of action potentials. A number of diverse lipid-soluble neurotoxins, such as batrachotoxin, veratridine, aconitine, grayanotoxins, pyrethroid insecticides, brevetoxins and ciguatoxin, target voltage-gated Na(+) channels for their primary actions. These toxins promote Na(+) channel opening, induce depolarization of the resting membrane potential, and thus drastically affect the excitability of nerve, muscle and cardiac tissues. Poisoning by these lipid-soluble neurotoxins causes hyperexcitability of excitable tissues, followed by convulsions, paralysis and death in animals. How these lipid-soluble neurotoxins alter Na(+) channel gating mechanistically remains unknown. Recent mapping of receptor sites within the Na(+) channel protein for these neurotoxins using site-directed mutagenesis has provided important clues on this subject. Paradoxically, the receptor site for batrachotoxin and veratridine on the voltage-gated Na(+) channel alpha-subunit appears to be adjacent to or overlap with that for therapeutic drugs such as local anaesthetics (LAs), antidepressants and anticonvulsants. This article reviews the physiological actions of lipid-soluble neurotoxins on voltage-gated Na(+) channels, their receptor sites on the S6 segments of the Na(+) channel alpha-subunit and a possible linkage between their receptors and the gating function of Na(+) channels.  相似文献   

4.
Single Na+ channels activated by veratridine and batrachotoxin   总被引:14,自引:7,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
Voltage-sensitive Na+ channels from rat skeletal muscle plasma membrane vesicles were inserted into planar lipid bilayers in the presence of either of the alkaloid toxins veratridine (VT) or batrachotoxin (BTX). Both of these toxins are known to cause persistent activation of Na+ channels. With BTX as the channel activator, single channels remain open nearly all the time. Channels activated with VT open and close on a time scale of 1-10 s. Increasing the VT concentration enhances the probability of channel opening, primarily by increasing the rate constant of opening. The kinetics and voltage dependence of channel block by 21-sulfo-11-alpha-hydroxysaxitoxin are identical for VT and BTX, as is the ionic selectivity sequence determined by bi-ionic reversal potential (Na+ approximately Li+ greater than K+ greater than Rb+ greater than Cs+). However, there are striking quantitative differences in open channel conduction for channels in the presence of the two activators. Under symmetrical solution conditions, the single channel conductance for Na+ is about twice as high with BTX as with VT. Furthermore, the symmetrical solution single channel conductances show a different selectivity for BTX (Na+ greater than Li+ greater than K+) than for VT (Na+ greater than K+ greater than Li+). Open channel current-voltage curves in symmetrical Na+ and Li+ are roughly linear, while those in symmetrical K+ are inwardly rectifying. Na+ currents are blocked asymmetrically by K+ with both BTX and VT, but the voltage dependence of K+ block is stronger with BTX than with VT. The results show that the alkaloid neurotoxins not only alter the gating process of the Na+ channel, but also affect the structure of the open channel. We further conclude that the rate-determining step for conduction by Na+ does not occur at the channel's "selectivity filter," where poorly permeating ions like K+ are excluded.  相似文献   

5.
The voltage-sensitive sodium channel of rat brain synaptosomes was solubilized with sodium cholate. The solubilized sodium channel migrated on a sucrose density gradient with an apparent S20,w of approximately 12 S, retained [3H]saxitoxin ([3H]STX) binding activity that was labile at 36 degrees C but no longer bound 125I-labeled scorpion toxin (125I-ScTX). Following reconstitution into phosphatidylcholine vesicles, the channel regained 125I-ScTX binding and thermal stability of [3H]STX binding. Approximately 50% of the [3H]STX binding activity and 58% of 125I-ScTX binding activity were recovered after reconstitution. The reconstituted sodium channel bound STX and ScTX with KD values of 5 and 10 nM, respectively. Under depolarized conditions, veratridine enhanced the binding of 125I-ScTX with a K0.5 of 20 microM. These KD and K0.5 values are similar to those of the native synaptosome sodium channel. 125I-ScTX binding to the reconstituted sodium channel, as with the native channel, was voltage dependent. The KD for 125I-ScTX increased with depolarization. This voltage dependence was used to demonstrate that the reconstituted channel transports Na+. Activation of sodium channels by veratridine under conditions expected to cause hyperpolarization of the reconstituted vesicles increased 125I-ScTX binding 3-fold. This increased binding was blocked by STX with K0.5 = 5 nM. These data indicate that reconstituted sodium channels can transport Na+ and hyperpolarize the reconstituted vesicles. Thus, incorporation of solubilized synaptosomal sodium channels into phosphatidylcholine vesicles results in recovery of toxin binding and action at each of the three neurotoxin receptor sites and restoration of Na+ transport by the reconstituted channels.  相似文献   

6.
We have studied the effects of the proteolytic enzyme Pronase on the membrane currents of voltage-clamped squid axons. Internal perfusion of the axons with Pronase rather selectively destroys inactivation of the Na conductance (gNa). At the level of a single channel, Pronase probably acts in an all-or-none manner: each channel inactivates normally until its inactivation gate is destroyed, and then it no longer inactivates. Pronase reduces Na, possibly by destroying some of the channels, but after removal of its inactivation gate a Na channel seems no longer vulnerable to Pronase. The turn-off kinetics and the voltage dependence of the Na channel activation gates are not affected by Pronase, and it is probable that the enzyme does not affect these gates in any way. Neither the K channels nor their activation gates are affected in a specific way by Pronase. Tetrodotoxin does not protect the inactivation gates from Pronase, nor does maintained inactivation of the Na channels during exposure to Pronase. Our results suggest that the inactivation gate is a readily accessible protein attached to the inner end of each Na channel. It is shown clearly that activation and inactivation of Na channels are separable processes, and that Na channels are distinct from K channels.  相似文献   

7.
In order to test the requirement of Na channel inactivation for the action of local anesthetics, we investigated the inhibitory effects of quaternary and tertiary amine anesthetics on normally inactivating and noninactivating Na currents in squid axons under voltage clamp. Either the enzymatic mixture pronase, or chloramine-T (CT), a noncleaving, oxidizing reagent, was used to abolish Na channel inactivation. We found that both the local anesthetics QX-314 and etidocaine, when perfused internally at 1 mM, elicited a "tonic" (resting) block of Na currents, a "time-dependent" block that increased during single depolarizations, and a "use-dependent" (phasic) block that accumulated as a result of repetitive depolarizations. All three effects occurred in both control and CT-treated axons. As in previous reports, little time-dependent or phasic block by QX-314 appeared in pronase-treated axons, although tonic block remained. Time-dependent block was greatest and fastest at large depolarizations (Em greater than +60 mV) for both the control and CT-treated axons. The recovery kinetics from phasic block were the same in control and CT-modified axons. The voltage dependence of the steady state phasic block in CT-treated axons differed from that in the controls; an 8-10% reduction of the maximum phasic block and a steepening and shift of the voltage dependence in the hyperpolarizing direction resulted from CT treatment. The results show that these anesthetics can bind rapidly to open Na channels in a voltage-dependent manner, with no requirement for fast inactivation. We propose that the rapid phasic blocking reactions in nerve are consequences primarily of channel activation, mediated by binding of anesthetics to open channels, and that the voltage dependence of phasic block arises directly from that of channel activation.  相似文献   

8.
The temperature dependence of some of the electrical characteristics of neuronal membranes from Aplysia giant neurons and crustacean and cuttlefish giant axons has been analyzed. Arrhenius plots for the maximum rate of depolarization of (V+max) or repolarization (V-max) of the action potential, for the resting membrane conductance, and for the speed of propagation of the action potential, exhibited clear breaks at characteristic temperatures between 17 and 20 degrees C. Lobster giant axons and frog nodes of Ranvier were voltage-clamped at different temperatures between 5 and 30 degrees C. Arrhenius plots for relaxation times related to the opening and closing processes affecting the Na+ and K+ channels were linear. No 'transition' temperature was detected. However, clear-cut changes in (Formula: see text) Na+ and K+ currents, were consistantly observed around 18 degrees C. Values for (Formula: see text) plateaued above 18 degrees C, then decreased gradually as a function of reduced temperature. Variations in temperature between 1 and 30 degrees C did not alter the binding properties of [3H]tetrodotoxin to a purified crab axonal membrane. Pharmacological properties of the Na+ channel are sensitive to temperature. The temperature-dependent effect of veratridine has been studied and indicates a change in properties of the Na+ channel below 20 degrees C. These results support the possibility that the fluidity of membrane lipids in the ionic channel microenvironment may influence the degree to which the channel can open.  相似文献   

9.
A fluorescence assay for measuring Na channel activation in liposomes containing voltage-sensitive Na channels isolated from Electrophorus electricus is described. The assay is based on transport of a heavy-metal cation, T1+, through the activated channel to quench fluorescence of an internalized, water-soluble chromophore. The channel is "locked" in a chronically opened configuration with alkaloid neurotoxins such as veratridine or batrachotoxin. Diffusion potentials are used to amplify the signal, and enlarged liposomes (greater than 8000 A) result in time courses extended to the range of seconds. Analysis of the kinetics of quenching yields parameters that behave as linear functions of channel activation and reflect vesicle size and channel abundance. The k1/2's for activation by veratridine and batrachotoxin were 5 microM and 169 nM, respectively, and that for tetrodotoxin blockade was 4 nM. Externally applied QX-222 and tetrodotoxin each acted to partially block the stimulated signal, as expected for compounds that act on oppositely oriented channels in the membrane. Single-channel conductances estimated with either veratridine or batrachotoxin ranged between 0.6 and 40.7 pS, corresponding to transport numbers of (1.2 X 10(5)) to (8.1 X 10(6)) ions s-1 channel-1 under the conditions of assay. The assay is approximately 100-fold more sensitive than radiotracer influx assays, requiring 1 fmol of protein per time course.  相似文献   

10.
Open channel properties of canine cardiac Purkinje cell Na+ channels were studied with single channel cell-attached recording and with whole cell macroscopic current recording in internally perfused cells. Single channel currents and membrane currents increased with an increase in Na+ concentration, but showed evidence of saturation. Assuming first-order binding, the Km for Na+ was 370 mM. PCs/PNa was 0.020 and PK/PNa was 0.094. The current-voltage relationship for single channels showed prominent flattening in the hyperpolarizing direction. This flattening was accentuated by 10 mM Ca2+ and was greatly reduced in O mM Ca2+, indicating that the rectification was a consequence of Ca2+ block of the Na+ channels. A similar instantaneous current-voltage relationship was seen for the whole cell membrane currents. These results demonstrate that the cardiac channel shows substantial Ca2+ block, although it is relatively insensitive to tetrodotoxin. The Na+ and Ca2+ binding properties could be modeled by the four-barrier Eyring rate theory model, with similar values to those reported for the neuroblastoma Na+ channel (Yamamoto, D.,J.Z. Yeh, and T. Narahashi, 1984, Biophys J., 45:337-344).  相似文献   

11.
Veratridine, an alkaloid isolated from the rhizome of V. album, binds and slows the inactivation of the brain sodium channels. The synthetic pentapeptide KIFMK causes a voltage- and use-dependent open-channel block of the RIIA (rat brain type IIA) sodium channel (Eaholtz, Scheuer & Catterall, 1994). Our studies on the RIIA sodium channel expressed in CHO cells reveal that the fraction of veratridine modified sodium channels decreases linearly with increasing KIFMK concentration. However, the time constant for dissociation of veratridine from the channel remains unchanged in the presence of a high concentration of KIFMK, as opposed to that in the presence of QX314 where the dissociation appears to be more complex. These data are consistent with mutually exclusive binding of the open channel blocking peptide and veratridine to the brain sodium channel. Received: 19 November 1996/Revised: 31 July 1997  相似文献   

12.
1. Sodium uptake associated with the activation of voltage-sensitive sodium channels by alkaloid activators, batrachotoxin, veratridine, and aconitine in presynaptic nerve terminals isolated from the central nervous system of cockroach (Periplaneta americana) was investigated. 2. Batrachotoxin (K0.5, 0.2 microM) was full agonist as for most effective activator of Na+ uptake; veratridine (K0.5, 2.5 microM) and aconitine (K0.5, 7.6 microM) produced a maximal stimulation of 22Na+ uptake that were 71% and 43% respectively of that produced by batrachotoxin. 3. Veratridine-dependent 22Na+ uptake was completely inhibited by tetrodotoxin (I0.5, 11 nM), a specific inhibitor of the nerve membrane sodium channels. 4. The present study describes appropriate conditions for measuring neurotoxins--stimulated sodium transport in insect central nervous system synaptosomes. The data show that voltage-sensitive sodium channels as defined by specific activation by the alkaloid neurotoxins are qualitatively distinct in insect synaptosomes than those previously described for vertebrate brain synaptosomes, cultured neuronal cell, nerve membrane vesicles and neuroblastoma cells.  相似文献   

13.
Voltage-gated sodium channel (VGSC) blockers are widely used in the therapy, but most currently available blockers have suboptimal profile. However, discovery of new drug candidates has been hampered by the lack of appropriate in vitro assays. We established a fluorometric, plate reader-based membrane potential assay for testing the inhibitory potency of various VGSC blocking drugs, using primary cultures of cerebellar neurons, and veratridine, as activator of VGSCs. Since inhibition was strongly dependent on the depolarizing effect of veratridine, the EC(80) value of veratridine was determined on each experimental day, and this concentration was used for drug testing. This strict control on agonist effect seems to improve the reliability of the dose-inhibition measurements with antagonists. Veratridine responses could be completely inhibited by tetrodotoxin (TTX, IC(50)=17 nM), consistent with the exclusive expression of TTX-sensitive VGSCs. A variety of compounds known to block sodium channels inhibited veratridine-induced membrane depolarization concentration-dependently. Furthermore, inhibitory potencies of drugs strongly depended on whether their administration preceded or followed veratridine application. Potency of lamotrigine, carbamazepine, phenytoin and lidocaine was approximately 10-fold higher when applied after a steady-state depolarization had been achieved by a supramaximal veratridine dose, compared with those from a different protocol, where cells were preincubated with the antagonists prior to veratridine application. On the contrary, there was only relatively small difference between the IC(50) values of GBR 12909 obtained from the two different protocols (0.51 microM versus 1.23 microM). In contrast with most sodium channel blockers, this compound lacks binding preference to inactivated channels. We suggest that comparison of the results obtained with a particular blocker in the pretreatment and post-treatment schedules may be suitable for drawing conclusions regarding the state-dependency of its action. Thus, relevant information can be obtained about the potential therapeutic utility of different drugs by applying non-electrophysiological methods.  相似文献   

14.
The inhibition by saxitoxin (STX) of single Na channels incorporated into planar lipid bilayers and modified by batrachotoxin (BTX) previously has been shown to be voltage dependent (Krueger, B.K.,J.F. Worley, and R. J. French, 1983, Nature [Lond.], 303:172-175; Moczydlowski, E., S. Hall, S. S. Garber, G. S. Strichartz, and C. Miller, 1984, J. Gen. Physiol., 84:687-704). We tested for such a voltage dependence of STX block of the Na current in voltage-clamped frog nodes of Ranvier. The block by STX of normal Na channels showed no modulation in response to maintained (20 s) changes of the membrane potential or to a train of brief pulses to potentials more positive than the holding potential. However, when the nodal channels were modified by BTX, the train of pulses produced a modulation of the block of the Na current by STX. The modulation of STX block depended on the voltage of the conditioning pulses and this voltage dependence agreed well with that predicted from the single channel studies over the membrane potential range used in those studies. In addition, we found that the voltage dependence of STX block was manifest only at potentials equal to or more positive than required to activate the channels. Most of the apparent differences among data from single channels in bilayers, equilibrium binding studies of STX, and the experiments described here are resolved by the hypotheses that (a) STX binding to open channels is voltage dependent, and (b) the affinities of STX for closed and inactivated channels are independent of voltage, equal, and less than the open channel affinity at potentials less than 0 mV. Whether these hypotheses apply to the STX block of all Na channels or just of BTX-modified channels remains to be determined.  相似文献   

15.
The Na+ channel activity (tetrodotoxin sensitive 22Na+ flux induced by veratridine and/or anemone toxin II) was studied in two fractions of brain cell plasma membranes, named A and B, isolated by the method of Gray and Whittaker ((1962) J. Anat. 96, 79–87) from rats 5, 10, 30 and 60 days old. The 22Na+ flux was measured in membrane vesicles formed by the isolated membranes, in the absence of drugs (control), in the presence of veratridine, and in the presence of veratridine plus tetrodotoxin. Fraction A consists primarily of neuronal and glial membranes in rats of 5 and 10 days of age, while in the older rats this fraction becomes enriched in myelin. In Fraction A of 5-day-old and 10-day-old rats, veratridine (25 μM) increases the 22Na+ flux 2.4- and 1.6-fold, respectively, and the increment continues to diminish with age, until it becomes negligible in the 60-day-old rats. Fraction B consists of synaptosomes and membrane vesicles, and at the four ages studied veratridine (25 μM) causes an increment of the 22Na+ flux of about 2.5-fold. Fractions A and B from 10-day-old rats, and Fraction B from 60-day-old rats, which are sensitive to veratridine, also respond to anemone toxin II. When veratridine is used in presence of anemone toxin II (0.5 μM), the K0.5 for veratridine is diminished and the maximum 22Na+ flux is increased. The increments of 22Na+ flux caused by veratridine and/or anemone toxin II in Fractions A and B are blocked by tetrodotoxin (K0.5 approx. 5 nM). Fraction A from 60-day-old rats could be subfractionated by osmotic shock and sucrose gradient centrifugation to obtain three subfractions, two of which are enriched in axolemma and display Na+ chennel activity. The other subfraction is enriched in myelin and shows no Na+ channel actiivty. The plasma membrane preparations from young rats (up to 10 days) are devoid of myelin and are useful for studies of Na+ channel activity.  相似文献   

16.
The inhibitory effects of local anesthetics (LAs) of cocaine and bupivacaine optical isomers on Na+ currents were studied in clonal GH3 cells under whole-cell patch clamp conditions. At holding potential of -100 mV, all four isomers inhibited peak Na+ currents when the cell was stimulated infrequently. The dose-response curves of this tonic block of peak Na+ currents by (-)/(+) cocaine and (-)/(+) bupivacaine were well fitted by the Langmuir isotherm, suggesting that one LA isomer blocked one Na+ channel. Each pair of isomers showed no greater than a twofold difference in stereoselectivity toward Na+ channels. Additional block of Na+ currents occurred when the cell was stimulated at 2 Hz. This use-dependent block was also observed in all four isomers, which again displayed little stereoselectivity. The voltage dependence of the use-dependent block produced by cocaine isomers did not overlap with the activation of Na+ channels but did overlap with the steady-state inactivation (h infinity), indicating that cocaine can bind directly to the inactivated state of Na+ channels before channel opening. In comparison, the peak batrachotoxin (BTX)-modified Na+ currents were little inhibited by cocaine and bupivacaine isomers. However, the maintained BTX-modified Na+ currents were highly sensitive toward the (-) form of cocaine and bupivacaine isomers during a prolonged depolarization. As a result, a profound time-dependent block of BTX-modified Na+ currents was evident in the presence of these LA isomers. The estimated values of the equilibrium dissociation constant (KD in micromolar) at +50 mV were 35.8, 661, 7.0, and 222 for (-)/(+) cocaine and (-)/(+) bupivacaine, respectively. Although chloramine-T (CT) also modified the fast inactivation of Na+ channels and gave rise to a maintained Na+ current during a prolonged depolarization, LA isomers showed no greater stereoselectivity in blocking this maintained current than in blocking the normal transient Na+ current. We conclude that (a) cocaine and bupivacaine isomers exhibit only weak stereoselectivity toward the LA receptor in normal and CT-treated Na+ channels, (b) BTX drastically modifies the configuration of the LA binding site so that the LA stereoselectivity of the open Na+ channels is altered by an order of magnitude, and (c) the (-) forms of cocaine and bupivacaine interact strongly with the open state of BTX-modified Na+ channels but only weakly, if at all, with the closed state. The last finding may explain why most LA drugs were reported to be less effective toward BTX-modified Na+ channels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Regulation of Na+ channels by neurotoxins has been studied in pinched- off nerve endings (synaptosomes) from rat brain. Activation of Na+ channels by the steroid batrachotoxin and by the alkaloid veratridine resulted in an increase in the rate of influx of 22Na into the synaptosomes. In the presence of 145 mM Na+, these agents also depolarized the synaptosomes, as indicated by increased fluorescence in the presence of a voltage-sensitive oxacarbocyanine dye [diO-C5(3)]. Polypeptide neurotoxins from the scorpion Leiurus quinquestriatus and from the sea anemone Anthopleura xanthogrammica potentiated the stimulatory effects of batrachotoxin and veratridine on the influx of 22Na into synaptosomes. Saxitoxin and tetrodotoxin blocked the stimulatory effects of batrachotoxin and veratridine, both in the presence and absence of the polypeptide toxins, but did not affect control 22Na influx or resting membrane potential. A three-state model for Na+ channel operation can account for the effects of these neurotoxins on Na+ channels as determined both by Na+ flux measurements in vitro and by electrophysiological experiments in intact nerve and muscle.  相似文献   

18.
To study the role the phenyl group plays in producing local anesthetic block, a sequence of n-alkanols and phenyl-substituted alkanols (Φ-alkanols) were characterized in their ability to block Na channels. The sequence of n-alkanols studied possess 3–5 carbons (propanol-pentanol). The action of phenol and 3-Φ-alkanols (benzyl alcohol, phenethyl alcohol, 3-phenyl-1-propanol) were also studied. Na currents (I Na ) were recorded from single frog skeletal muscle fibers using the Vaseline-gap voltage clamp technique. I Na s were recorded prior to, during, and following the removal of the solutes in Ringer's solution. All alkanols and phenol acted to block I Na in a dose-dependent manner. Effective doses to produce half block (ED50) of I Na or Na conductance (G Na ) were obtained from dose-response relations for all solutes used. The block of G Na depended on voltage, and could be separated into voltage-dependent and -independent components. Each solute acted to shift G Na -V relations in a depolarized direction and reduce the maximum G Na and slope of the relation. All solutes acted to speed up I Na kinetics and cause hyperpolarizing shifts in steady-state inactivation. The magnitude of the kinetic changes increased with dose. Size was an important variable in determining the magnitude of the changes in I Na ; however, size alone was not sufficient to predict the changes in I Na . ED50s for G Na and AP block could be predicted as a function of intrinsic molar volume, hydrogen bond acceptor basicity (β) and donor acidity (α), and polarity (P) of the solutes. The equivalency of ED50 predictions for AP and G Na block can be explained by the fact that AP block arises from channel block and solute-induced changes in I Na kinetics. Φ-alkanols were more effective at blocking and inactivating Na channels than their unsubstituted counterparts. Phenyl-substituted alkanols are more likely to interact with the channel than their unsubstituted counterparts. Received: 11 August 2000/Revised: 21 December 2000  相似文献   

19.
In this report, the alkali metal cation selectivity of the purified, voltage-dependent sodium channel from rat skeletal muscle is described. Isolated sodium channel protein (980-2840 pmol of saxitoxin binding/mg of protein) was reconstituted into egg phosphatidylcholine vesicles, and channels were subsequently activated by either batrachotoxin (5 X 10(-6) M) or veratridine (5 X 10(-4) M). Activation of the reconstituted sodium channel by batrachotoxin permitted rapid specific influx of cations into channel-containing vesicles. Quenched flow kinetic techniques were adapted to allow resolution of the kinetics of cation movement. Uptake rates for 42K+, 86Rb+, and 137Cs+ were measured directly and half-times for equilibration at 18 degrees C were determined to be 350 ms, 2.5 s, and 10 s, respectively, in this vesicle population. 22Na+ equilibration occurred within the mimimum quenching time of the apparatus (90 ms) but an upper limit of 50 ms at 18 degrees C could be assigned to its half-time. Based on this upper estimate for Na+, cation selectivity ratios of the batrachotoxin-activated channel were Na+ (1):K+ (0.14):Rb+ (0.02):Cs+ (0.005). Toxin-stimulated influx could be blocked by saxitoxin with a Ki of approximately 5 X 10(-9) M at 18 degrees C. Rates of cation movement through veratridine-activated channels were much slower, with half-times of 1.0, 1.2, 2.0, and 2.6 min at 36 degrees C for Na+, K+, Rb+, and Cs+, respectively. The temperature dependences of batrachotoxin and veratridine-stimulated cation uptake were markedly different. The activation energies for 86Rb+ and 137Cs+ movement into batrachotoxin-activated vesicles were 7.6 and 6.1 kcal/mol, respectively, while comparable measurements for these two cations in veratridine-activated vesicles yielded activation energies of 31 kcal/mol. Measurements of cation exchange with batrachotoxin-activated channels may reflect characteristics of an open sodium channel while the process of channel opening itself may be rate-limiting when veratridine is used for activation.  相似文献   

20.
Dynamics of 9-aminoacridine block of sodium channels in squid axons   总被引:5,自引:3,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The interactions of 9-aminoacridine with ionic channels were studied in internally perfused squid axons. The kinetics of block of Na channels with 9-aminoacridine varies depending on the voltage-clamp pulses and the state of gating machinery of Na channels. In an axon with intact h gate, the block exhibits frequency- and voltage-dependent characteristics. However, in the pronase-perfused axon, the frequency- dependent block disappears, whereas the voltage-dependent block remains unchanged. A time-dependent decrease in Na currents indicative of direct block of Na channel by drug molecule follows a single exponential function with a time constant of 2.0 +/- 0.18 and 1.0 +/- 0.19 ms (at 10 degrees C and 80 m V) for 30 and 100 microM 9- aminoacridine, respectively. A steady-state block can be achieved during a single 8-ms depolarizing pulse when the h gate has been removed. The block in the h-gate intact axon can be achieved only with multiple conditioning pulses. The voltage-dependent block suggests that 9-aminoacridine binds to a site located halfway across the membrane with a dissociation constant of 62 microM at 0 m V. 9-Aminoacridine also blocks K channels, and the block is time- and voltage-dependent.  相似文献   

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