State-dependent block of wild-type and inactivation-deficient Na + channels by flecainide

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Abstract

The antiarrhythmic agent flecainide appears beneficial for painful congenital myotonia and LQT-3/AKPQ syndrome. Both diseases manifest small but persistent late Na+ currents in skeletal or cardiac myocytes. Flecainide may therefore block late Na+ currents for its efficacy. To investigate this possibility, we characterized state-dependent block of flecainide in wild-type and inactivation-deficient rNav1.4 muscle Na + channels (L435W/L437C/A438W) expressed with β1 subunits in Hek293t cells. The flecainide-resting block at -140 mV was weak for wild-type Na+ channels, with an estimated 50% inhibitory concentration (IC 50) of 365 μM when the cell was not stimulated for 1,000 s. At 100 μM flecainide, brief monitoring pulses of +30 mV applied at frequencies as low as 1 per 60 s, however, produced an ∼70% use-dependent block of peak Na+ currents. Recovery from this use-dependent block followed an exponential function, with a time constant over 225 s at -140 mV. Inactivated wild-type Na+ channels interacted with flecainide also slowly at -50 mV, with a time constant of 7.9 s. In contrast, flecainide blocked the open state of inactivation-deficient Na+ channels potently as revealed by its rapid time-dependent block of late Na+ currents. The IC 50 for flecainide open-channel block at +30 mV was 0.61 μM, right within the therapeutic plasma concentration range; on-rate and off-rate constants were 14.9 μM-1s-1 and 12.2 s-1, respectively. Upon repolarization to -140 mV, flecainide block of inactivation-deficient Na+ channels recovered, with a time constant of 11.2 s, which was ∼20-fold faster than that of wild-type counterparts. We conclude that flecainide directly blocks persistent late Na+ currents with a high affinity. The fast-inactivation gate, probably via its S6 docking site, may further stabilize the flecainide-receptor complex in wild-type Na+ channels.

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Wang, G. K., Russell, C., & Wang, S. Y. (2003). State-dependent block of wild-type and inactivation-deficient Na + channels by flecainide. Journal of General Physiology, 122(3), 365–374. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.200308857

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