4.5 Article

Molecular Modeling of Cardiac Sodium Channel with Mexiletine

Journal

MEMBRANES
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/membranes12121252

Keywords

tonic block; use-dependent block; local anesthetics; molecular modeling; Monte Carlo energy minimizations; voltage-sensing domains; hydrophobic access pathway

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This study explored the mechanism of action of the sodium channel blocker Mexiletine (MEX) on sodium channels using computational methods. The study found that MEX blocks sodium channels by interacting with specific residues. Specifically, the NH3 group of MEX interacts with a cation-attractive site between backbone carbonyls at the outer-pore bottom, and the aromatic ring affects the activity of the sodium channel by protruding into the inner pore. This study reveals the binding mode and mechanism of action of MEX on sodium channels, which is of great significance for further research on the interaction between drugs and sodium channels.
A sodium channel blocker mexiletine (MEX) is used to treat chronic pain, myotonia and some arrhythmias. Mutations in the pore domain (PD) of voltage-gated sodium channels differently affect tonic block (TB) and use-dependent block (UDB) by MEX. Previous studies identified several MEX-sensing residues in the hNav1.5 channel and demonstrated that the channel block by MEX increases with activation of the voltage-sensing domain III (VSDIII), whereas MEX stabilizes the activated state of VSDIII. Structural rationales for these observations are unclear. Here, Monte Carlo (MC) energy minimizations were used to dock MEX and its more potent analog, Thio-Me2, into the hNav1.5 cryo-EM structure with activated VSDs and presumably inactivated PD. Computations yielded two ensembles of ligand binding poses in close contacts with known MEX-sensing residues in helices S6(III), S6(IV) and P1(IV). In both ensembles, the ligand NH3 group approached the cation-attractive site between backbone carbonyls at the outer-pore bottom, while the aromatic ring protruded ether into the inner pore (putative UDB pose) or into the III/IV fenestration (putative TB pose). In silico deactivation of VSDIII shifted helices S4-S5(III), S5(III), S6(III) and S6(IV) and tightened the TB site. In a model with activated VSDIII and three resting VSDs, MC-minimized energy profile of MEX pulled from the TB site towards lipids shows a deep local minimum due to interactions with 11 residues in S5(III), P1(III), S6(III) and S6(IV). The minimum may correspond to an interim binding site for MEX in the hydrophobic path to the TB site along the lipid-exposed sides of repeats III and IV where 15 polar and aromatic residues would attract cationic blockers. The study explains numerous experimental data and suggests the mechanism of allosteric modification of the MEX binding site by VSDIII.

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