4.7 Article

Probing the interaction between inactivation gating and D-sotalol block of HERG

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 87, Issue 11, Pages 1012-1018

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/01.RES.87.11.1012

Keywords

HERG; potassium channel; inactivation; antiarrhythmic drugs

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [P01 HL46681] Funding Source: Medline

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Potassium channels encoded by HERG underlie I-Kr, a sensitive target for most class III antiarrhythmic drugs, including methanesulfonanilides such as D-sotalol. Recently it was shown that these drugs are trapped in the channel as it closes during hyperpolarization. At the same time, HERG channels rapidly open and inactivate when depolarized, and methanesulfonanilide block is known to develop in a use-dependent manner, suggesting a potential role for inactivation in drug binding. However, the role of HERG inactivation in class III drug action is uncertain: pore mutations that remove inactivation reduce block, yet many of these mutations also modify the channel permeation properties and could alter drug affinity through gating-independent mechanisms. In the present study, we identify a definitive role for inactivation gating in D-sotalol block of HERG, using interventions complementary to mutagenesis. These interventions (addition of extracellular Cd2+, removal of extracellular Na+) modify the voltage dependence of inactivation but not activation. In normal extracellular solutions, block of HERG current by 300 mu mol/L D-sotalol reached 80% after a 10-minute period of repetitive depolarization to +20 mV. Maneuvers that impeded steady-state inactivation also reduced D-sotalol block of HERG: 100 mu mol/L Cd2+ reduced steady-state block to 55% at +20 mV (P<0.05); removing extracellular Na+ reduced block to 44% (P<0.05). An inactivation-disabling mutation (G628C-S631C) reduced D-sotalol block to only 11% (P<0.05 versus wild type). However, increasing the rate of channel inactivation by depolarizing to +60 mV reduced D-sotalol block to 49% (P<0.05 versus +20 mV), suggesting that the drug does not primarily bind to the inactivated state. Coexpression of MiRP1 with HERG had no effect on inactivation gating and did not modify D-sotalol block. We postulate that D-sotalol accesses its receptor in the open pore, and the drug-receptor interaction is then stabilized by inactivation. Whereas deactivation traps the bound methanesulfonanilide during hyperpolarization, we propose that HERG inactivation stabilizes the drug-receptor interaction during membrane depolarization.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available