Blockade of rabbit atrial sodium channels by lidocaine. Characterization of continuous and frequency-dependent blocking.
- 1 September 1989
- journal article
- abstracts
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 65 (3) , 723-739
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.65.3.723
Abstract
Lidocaine block of the cardiac sodium channel is believed to be primarily a function of channel state. For subthreshold potentials, block is limited to the inactivated state, whereas above threshold, block results from the combination of open- and inactivated-state block. Since, in the absence of drug, inactivation develops with time constants that vary from several hundred milliseconds to a few milliseconds as potential is varied from subthreshold to strongly depolarized levels, we would predict a similar voltage dependence of at least a fraction of block. Prior theoretical analyses from our laboratory suggest that there should be a direct parallel between blockade determined with a single pulse and trains of pulses. We tested these predictions by measuring the blockade of sodium current in cultured atrial myocytes during exposure to 80 microM lidocaine. We selected two test potentials for most of our studies, -80 mV, which was clearly in the subthreshold range of potentials, and -20 mV, which was close to the peak of the current-voltage curve. With single pulses of increasing duration, block developed with a single exponential time course and with time constants that decreased from 694 +/- 117 msec at -80 mV to 373 +/- 54 msec at -20 mV. In the absence of drug, inactivation developed with a time constant 176 +/- 17 at -80 mV and 2.9 +/- .5 msec at -20 mV. Despite the much slower onset of inactivation at -80 mV, no second-order delay in block development was observed. This suggests that at -80 mV block is occurring to a channel conformation that is accessed without delay rather than the classical inactivated state. We compared the kinetics of block during a single continuous pulse with trains of pulses at -20 mV. The rate of block onset was faster during the pulse trains, suggesting an element of "activated state" block. We computed shifts in apparent inactivation from observed steady-state blockade. The computed shifts agree well with those observed, indicating that shifts in apparent inactivation result largely from voltage-sensitive equilibrium blockade. The classical states described in the Hodgkin-Huxley formalism may be too restrictive to fully describe the voltage- and time-dependent block of cardiac sodium channels.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Development of the fast sodium current in early embryonic chick heart cellsThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1988
- Sodium current in voltage clamped internally perfused canine cardiac Purkinje cellsBiophysical Journal, 1987
- Ligand binding to transiently accessible sites: Mechanisms for varying apparent binding ratesJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1987
- Antiarrhythmic Agents: The Modulated Receptor Mechanism of Action of Sodium and Calcium Channel-Blocking DrugsAnnual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 1984
- Lidocaine block of cardiac sodium channels.The Journal of general physiology, 1983
- The initial inward current in spherical clusters of chick embryonic heart cells.The Journal of general physiology, 1980
- Low intracellular pH and chemical agents slow inactivation gating in sodium channels of muscleNature, 1980
- Sodium Channel Inactivation in Squid Axon Is Removed by High Internal p H or Tyrosine-Specific ReagentsScience, 1978
- Time- and voltage-dependent interactions of antiarrhythmic drugs with cardiac sodium channelsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Reviews on Biomembranes, 1977
- Inhibition of sodium currents in frog ranvier node treated with local anesthetics Role of slow sodium inactivationBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Biomembranes, 1976