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0022-3565/97/2813-1247$03.00/0 THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS Copyright © 1997 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics JPET 281:1247–1256, 1997 Vol. 281, No. 3 Printed in U.S.A. Characterization of Nifedipine Block of the Human Heart Delayed Rectifier, hKv1.51 XUE ZHANG, JAMES W. ANDERSON and DAVID FEDIDA Department of Physiology, Botterell Hall, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Accepted for publication February 10, 1997 time constants (t2) for nifedipine block of hKv1.5 were concentration and voltage dependent. At 140 mV, t2 was 16.7 6 0.8 (10 mM), and 4.8 6 0.6 msec (50 mM), (n 5 4 – 8). Using a first order kinetic analysis, apparent binding constants were 5.64 3 106 M21 s21 (k11, on-rate) and 37.5 s21 (k21, off-rate), with a Kd of 6.65 mM, close to that obtained from the dose-response curve. An increase in the off-rate (k21) could explain relief of block .120 mV. The rank order of block under different patch configurations was whole-cell ' outside-out . inside-out .. cell-attached macropatches. Together, these suggested a binding site for nifedipine at the extracellular pore of hKv1.5 or at a hydrophobic channel domain within the lipid bilayer at a site that is more accessible from the extracellular side. Nifedipine is a Ca11 channel antagonist widely used for the treatment of a variety of cardiovascular disorders. Normally, nifedipine blocks voltage-gated calcium channels with a high affinity (Kd 5 310 nM in rabbit right atrium, Mecca and Love, 1992; and 200 nM in myocardium, Charnet et al., 1987). However, voltage-dependent K1 channels belong to the same supergene family as Ca11 and Na1 channels (Catterall, 1988; Jan and Jan, 1989), with areas of homology in the pore and around the carboxyl terminal of S6 in Ca11 and K1 channels (Rampe et al., 1993; Nakayama et al., 1991), and it is known that three types of Ca11 antagonists, verapamil, nifedipine and diltiazem, all block cloned K1 channels (Rampe et al., 1993; Grissmer et al., 1994). Verapamil and nifedipine produced a marked block of the transient outward current, Ito in rat ventricular myocytes (Jahnel et al., 1994). Because Ito may contain multiple components of rapidly inactivating and slowly inactivating K1 channels, it is unclear which specific Kv channel or channels may be blocked. One component of Ito may be the rapidly activating delayed rectifier K1 channel, hKv1.5 (Van Wagoner et al., 1996), cloned from human heart (Tamkun et al., 1991; Fedida et al., 1993), which is important in determining the duration of the plateau phase of the cardiac action potential. Data exist showing that hKv1.5 is blocked by all three types of Ca11 antagonists. Verapamil block of hKv1.5 was described in detail (Rampe et al., 1993) and a mechanism of open channel block from the inner pore was suggested. Diltiazem and nifedipine (Grissmer et al., 1994) have also been shown to block hKv1.5, but the detailed characteristics of nifedipine’s effects on hKv1.5 have not been studied. Our study was undertaken to examine the effects of nifedipine on hKv1.5 and to explore its mechanisms of action. Our data suggested that nifedipine was an open channel blocker, which acted predominantly at the external pore of hKv1.5 channels. The effects of nifedipine were concentration and voltage dependent, but the block was somewhat relieved at more positive potentials. This effect is in contrast to the block of hKv1.5 by verapamil (Rampe et al., 1993), the inhibition of native K1 channels by nifedipine (Jacobs and DeCoursey, 1990) or D600 and related phenylalkylamines (DeCoursey, 1995), and the block of Ca11 channels by organic Ca11 channel antagonists (Sanguinetti and Kass, 1984; Hume, 1985; Uehara and Hume, 1985), where block increased with potential. Materials and Methods Received for publication November 21, 1996. 1 This work was supported by grants from the Medical Research Foundation of Canada, and the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario, to D.F. Cell culture. The methods used to establish stable HEK cell lines expressing the hKv1.5 K1 channel and those used for electrophysi- ABBREVIATIONS: W/C, whole cell recording; C/A, cell-attached recording; O/O, outside-out recording; I/O, inside-out recording; Q, gating charge; HEK, human embryonic kidney; NMG, N-methyl-D-glucamine. 1247 Downloaded from jpet.aspetjournals.org at ASPET Journals on June 16, 2017 ABSTRACT Nifedipine antagonizes L-type Ca11 channels found throughout the cardiovascular system, but also blocks Kv channels, which are members of the same supergene family. We have examined nifedipine actions on the human heart K1 channel (hKv1.5) expressed in human embryonic kidney cells. Peak and steady-state currents on depolarization were reduced by nifedipine with Kd values of 18.6 6 2.7 and 6.3 6 0.5 mM respectively at 140 mV, and with Hill coefficients of 0.75 6 0.04 and 0.93 6 0.03. Block increased rapidly between -10 mV and 110 mV, coincident with channel opening and suggested an open channel block mechanism, which was confirmed by tail current crossover on repolarization (unblock on channel closing). At more positive potentials than 120 mV, block was relieved. The 1248 Zhang et al. hKv1.5 channels in HEK cells, there was no need for signal averaging, and single gating current transients could be observed. The average cell capacitance was quite small, and the absence of ionic current at negative membrane potentials allowed faithful leak subtraction of data. Data analysis. The concentration-response curve (figs. 2C and 7B) for changes in peak and steady-state current produced by nifedipine were computer-fitted to the Hill equation: f 5 1/@1 1 ~Kd/[D]n)] (1) where f is the fractional current block (f 5 1-Idrug/Icontrol) at drug concentration [D]; Kd is the concentration producing half-maximal inhibition and n is the Hill coefficient. The rapid component of inactivation induced by nifedipine was much faster than that observed in the absence of drug. Therefore, we used this drug induced time-constant (t2) as an approximation of the drug channel interaction kinetics, as described previously (Snyders et al., 1992; Slawsky and Castle, 1994), according to the equations: 1/t2 5 k11[D] 1 k21 (2a) Kd 5 k21/k11 (2b) and in which t2 is the current decay time constant caused by the drug; [D] is the concentration of drug; k11 and k21 are the apparent rate constants of binding and unbinding for the drug, respectively. The voltage dependence of block for the uncharged drug was determined as follows: leak-corrected current in the presence of drug was normalized to matching control at each voltage above -20 mV. Using data points in the range of full channel opening (.120 mV), the voltage dependence of block was fitted to a linear equation, and the slope of block determined. Alternatively, in “Discussion,” we have calculated the fractional block (f 5 1-Inif/Icontrol) at each potential and fitted data to the Woodhull equation: f 5 [D]/([D] 1 K*d z e2dzFE/RT) (3) where F, R, z and T have their usual meanings, d represents the fractional electrical distance, i.e., the fraction of the transmembrane electrical field sensed by a single charge at the receptor site. K*d represents the binding affinity at the reference voltage (0 mV). Experimental values are given as means 6 S.E.. Analysis of variance was used to compare the effects of nifedipine on hKv1.5 currents under different macropatch configurations; Paired t test was used to compare the amplitudes of off-gating charge in the presence of nifedipine with control. A value of P , .05 was considered statistically significant. Results Concentration-dependent and reversible block. The data in Figure 1 show the effects of nifedipine on hKv1.5 currents expressed in HEK cells under W/C recording conditions. The cell was held at -80 mV, and membrane currents were elicited before exposure to nifedipine, during exposure to 10 mM and 50 mM nifedipine and after wash out. These are currents in response to a series of step depolarizing pulses from -30 mV to 140 mV. Extracellular application of 10 mM and 50 mM nifedipine resulted in a reduction of both peak and steady-state hKv1.5 currents with a marked increase in the rate of outward current relaxation in the presence of nifedipine (Fig. 1B, 1C). This meant that steady-state currents recorded at the end of 250 ms pulses, were much more reduced by nifedipine than the peak currents, in a concentration-dependent manner. After 5 min wash out to control bath solution, the effect of nifedipine was largely reversed. Downloaded from jpet.aspetjournals.org at ASPET Journals on June 16, 2017 ological measurement of hKv1.5 currents have been described in detail previously (Fedida et al., 1993). Alternatively, hKv1.5 was transiently transfected into HEK cells using the mammalian expression vector pRc/CMV. Cells expressing hKv1.5 were detected by cotransfecting cells with the vector pHook-1 (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA). This plasmid encoded the production of an antibody to the hapten phOX, which when expressed is displayed on the cell surface. Transfected cells were maintained in modified Eagle’s medium at 37°C in an air/5% CO2 incubator in 25-mm Petri dishes plated on glass coverslips until use. One hour before experiments, cells were treated with beads coated with phOX. After 5 min, excess beads were washed off with cell culture medium and cells which had beads stuck to them were used for electrophysiological tests. The efficiency of dual transfection was observed to be better than 80%, so the beads provided a good means of identifying those cells that expressed hKv1.5. No difference was observed from data obtained using stable cell lines or transient expression of hKv1.5, so all results have been included in the analysis. Solutions. For W/C and O/O macropatches, the control pipette filling solution contained (in mM): KCl, 130; EGTA, 5; MgCl2, 1; HEPES, 10; Na2ATP, 4; GTP, 0.1; and was adjusted to pH 7.2 with KOH. The control bath solution contained (in mM): NaCl, 135; KCl, 5; sodium acetate, 2.8; MgCl2, 1; HEPES, 10; CaCl2, 1; and was adjusted to pH 7.4 with NaOH. For C/A and I/O macropatches, the pipette filling solution was the extracellular control solution used in W/C recording, and the bath solution was a 135 mM K1 solution designed to zero the membrane potential (in C/A recording). It contained (in mM): KCl, 135; HEPES, 10; MgCl2, 1; dextrose, 10; and was adjusted to pH 7.4 with KOH. For gating current experiments, cells were superfused with a solution containing (in mM): NMG, 140; HEPES, 10; CaCl2, 1; MgCl2, 1; dextrose, 10; pH 7.4 with HCl. The pipette solution contained (in mM): NMG, 140; HEPES, 10; MgCl2, 1; EGTA, 10; pH 7.2 using HCl. Nifedipine was dissolved in alcohol at a stock concentration of 1, 10 or 100 mM, and was protected from the light during all experiments. After control data were collected, the bathing solution was changed to include nifedipine. Nifedipine effects were very rapid on cells, apparently reaching a steady-state within three pulses (30 sec). Steady-state measurements made in the presence of nifedipine were obtained after at least 3 min exposure to the drug. All chemicals were from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). Electrophysiological procedures. Coverslips containing cells were removed from the incubator before experiments and placed in a superfusion chamber (volume 250 ml) containing the control bath solution at 22 to 23°C. W/C, C/A, O/O and I/O macropatch recordings were made via the variations of the patch-clamp technique (Hamill et al., 1981), using an Axopatch 200A amplifier (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA). Patch electrodes were pulled from thin-walled borosilicate glass (World Precision Instruments, Sarasota, FL) on a horizontal micropipette puller, fire-polished, and filled with appropriate solutions. Electrodes had resistances of 1.5 to 3.0 mV when filled with control filling solution. Analog capacity compensation and 75 to 85% series resistance compensation were used in all W/C measurements. In some experiments, leak subtraction was applied to data. Membrane potentials have been corrected, where appropriate, for junctional potentials that arose between the pipette and bath solution. Data were filtered at 5 to 10 kHz before digitization and stored on a microcomputer for later analysis using the pClamp6 software (Axon Instruments). In experiments where gating currents were recorded, the sample rate was 330 kHz and currents were usually leak-subtracted using a P/6 protocol similar to that described previously (Stühmer et al., 1991; McCormack et al., 1994; Bouchard and Fedida, 1995). Currents were low-pass filtered at 10 to 50 kHz during data collection or later at 10 kHz for data presentation. Pipettes were routinely sylgarded and fire polished to reduce electrode capacitance and improve seal resistance. The system that we used for expression of hKv1.5 conferred certain advantages for the measurement of gating current. Due to the high level of expression of Vol. 281 1997 Figure 1D showed that the current was restored to 85% of control current level. Current-voltage (I-V) relationships for the peak and steady-state outward current in the absence, presence of 10 and 50 mM and washout of nifedipine are shown in Figure 1E and F. Here it can be seen that both peak and steady-state current were reduced in a concentrationdependent manner, but that the reduction of steady-state current was much more than that of peak current. Native HEK cells also possess a small outwardly rectifying K1 current. The mean amplitude of this current was 204 6 19.7 pA at 140 mV (n 5 10), which is less than 2% of the total current in transfected cells on depolarization (compare control hKv1.5 current amplitudes in figs. 1E and 2). Nifedipine also reduced this current, with 50% block at .20 mM (n 5 3). However, due to the small current size, we have not considered contamination by this endogenous current to be significant. The effects of nifedipine on hKv1.5 over a wide range of concentrations from 0.2 to 200 mM, further confirmed that 1249 the block was concentration-dependent (fig. 2). Low concentrations of nifedipine (between 0.2 and 10 mM) are shown in figure 2A. The threshold for nifedipine action on hKv1.5 was around 100 to 200 nM, which was somewhat lower than expected for dihydropyridine block of hKv1.5 (cf., Grissmer et al., 1994). At low concentrations, up to '1 mM, there was little effect on peak outward current, but nifedipine induced a slow decay of current that reached a steady-state at the end of 1 sec depolarizing voltage clamp pulses. At higher concentrations than 1 mM, a reduction of peak current was observed and a more rapid decay of current to the steady-state. At high concentrations of nifedipine a marked reduction of peak current was observed (fig. 2B) with rapid current decay to the steady state. The concentration response curve for block of peak and steady-state outward current by nifedipine at a test potential of 140 mV is shown in figure 2C. As expected from data in figures 1 and 2, steady-state currents (E) showed a greater level of block at any particular nifedipine concentration than peak currents (F). The solid lines were fit to the data using the Hill equation (see “Materials and Methods,” equation 1). The resultant Kd values for the peak and steady state hKv1.5 current block by nifedipine were 18.6 6 2.7 and 6.3 6 0.5 mM, the Hill coefficients were 0.75 6 0.04 and 0.93 6 0.03, respectively. Voltage-dependent block. To examine the voltage-dependence of block, the relative steady-state current Inif/Ictl at the end of 400 msec voltage clamp pulses was plotted as a function of potential. The data in figure 3 show normalized hKv1.5 current-voltage(I-V) relationships for different concentrations of nifedipine. The dotted line is the normal activation curve of hKv1.5. This was obtained from the deactivating tail current amplitude at -20 mV after 15 msec depolarizing steps to potentials between -80 to 1100 mV from a holding potential of -100 mV. In the presence of 5, 10, 20 and 50 mM nifedipine, block increased rapidly between -10 and 110 mV, coinciding with the voltage range of channel opening. These data suggest that nifedipine binds primarily to the open state of hKv1.5 channels. Over the voltage range between 120 and 190 mV, almost all channels are open, but block was slightly relieved with depolarizing test potentials and showed a shallow voltage dependence. At different concentrations of nifedipine, block at 190 mV compared with 120 mV was reduced from 0.50 6 0.01 to 0.40 6 0.03 (5 mM), from 0.57 6 0.04 to 0.49 6 0.06 (10 mM), from 0.70 6 0.05 to 0.60 6 0.05 (20 mM), and from 0.89 6 0.02 to 0.84 6 0.02 (50 mM); (n 5 4–6). Over the potential range where channels were fully open, the relationship for block by nifedipine at depolarizing voltages was well fitted to a linear equation. The slopes of fit were 1.53 3 1023, 1.16 3 1023, 1.38 3 1023 and 7.35 3 1024 mV21 with 5, 10, 20 and 50 mM nifedipine, respectively. Nifedipine has a low pKa # 1.0 (Uehara and Hume, 1985), so almost all of the drug is uncharged in the physiological pH range around 7.4. In this situation a voltage-dependence to the drug action (once all channels are open) was not expected. The voltage dependence was not consistent with a positively charged drug acting at the intracellular mouth of the channel. One would expect increased block with potential as has been shown for the action of quinidine (Snyders et al., 1992; Fedida, 1997), quinine or tetrapentylammonium ions (Snyders and Yeola, 1995) on hKv1.5. However, if drug binding was coupled in some way to a charged process, like K1 flux, Downloaded from jpet.aspetjournals.org at ASPET Journals on June 16, 2017 Fig. 1. Nifedipine block of hKv1.5 current. A to D, Currents were elicited by 250-msec depolarizing pulses from the holding potential of -80 mV to voltages between -30 mV and 140 mV in increments of 110 mV. W/C currents were recorded in the absence of nifedipine (A) and the presence of 10 mM (B), 50 mM (C) and after 5 min wash out (D) nifedipine, respectively. E and F, Current-voltage (I-V) relationships for peak and steady-state outward current in the absence (F) and presence of 10 (É), 50 (ç)mM and wash out (M) of nifedipine are shown in E and F, respectively. The dotted line marks the zero current level. Data were from the same cell as panels A to D. Note that after exposure to high concentrations of nifedipine, wash out was often incomplete as in D. Nifedipine Block of hKv1.5 1250 Zhang et al. Vol. 281 and if the drug had an extracellular site of action, the results would be consistent with a relief of block with intracellular depolarization. This point is developed further in “Discussion.” Effects of nifedipine on current decay of hKv1.5. In the absence of nifedipine, current decayed slowly (fig. 2, A and B) and during the relatively short voltage pulses used here, was fitted to a single exponential function with a decay time constant of 230 6 8 msec (n 5 14) at 140 mV. After addition of nifedipine, the rate of current decay increased in a concentration-dependent manner (fig. 2, A and B) and could be well fitted with a double exponential function. The nifedipine-induced fast time constant, t2, was used as an index of the rate of block of hKv1.5. Figure 4A shows the effects of different concentrations of nifedipine and different voltages on the mean t2 values. At each voltage, t2 decreased in a concentration-dependent manner, which indicated a more rapid current decay. At each concentration of nifedipine, t2 became faster at voltages between 0 and 130 mV, then t2 showed a shallow decrease at more positive potentials. The rapid component of inactivation induced by nifedipine (t2, fig. 4A, 5–50 mM) was much faster (approximately 10-fold or more) than the slow component observed in the absence of drug. Therefore, t2 was used as an approximation of the time course of drug-channel interaction, as described previously (Snyders et al., 1992). Figure 4B shows the plot of 1/t2 vs. the concentration of nifedipine at a test potential of 140 mV. From equation 2a (see “Materials and Methods”), the best least squares fit to the data resulted in an apparent associ- Fig. 3. Voltage-dependence of current block by nifedipine. The dotted line represents the activation curve of control hKv1.5. This was obtained from deactivating tail current amplitude at -20 mV after 15-msec depolarizing steps to potentials between -80 to 1100 mV, from a holding potential of -100 mV. The symbols denote ratios of steady-state current in nifedipine to the control current value at each potential. Open symbols show the data between -10 and 110 mV. Filled symbols show the data at voltages positive to 120 mV. The solid lines were the best fit to a linear function in the form of y 5 ax 1 b. With 5, 10, 20 and 50 mM nifedipine, the slopes from this linear fit were 1.53 3 1023, 1.16 3 1023, 1.38 3 1023 and 7.35 3 1024 mV21. Data were mean 6 S.E. from 4 to 10 experiments. ation rate constant, k11 of 5.64 3 106 M21 sec21 and an apparent dissociation rate constant, k21 of 37.5 sec21. The resultant Kd value from equation 2b (see “Materials and Methods”) was 6.65 mM, which is consistent with the Kd value of 6.3 mM from the dose-response curve (fig. 2B). Downloaded from jpet.aspetjournals.org at ASPET Journals on June 16, 2017 Fig. 2. Concentration-dependent block of hKv1.5 by nifedipine. A and B, W/C current recording during voltage pulses to 140 mV from the holding potential of -80 mV. Currents were recorded in the steady-state at a large range of nifedipine concentrations. Current traces in A and B were from two different cells. The cell in A was exposed to low concentrations of nifedipine from 0.2 to 10 mM and the cell in B was exposed to high concentrations of nifedipine from 20 to 200 mM. C: Dose-response curve for nifedipine block of hKv1.5. Peak and steady-state reduction of current (relative to control) at a test potential of 140 mV was plotted against the concentration of nifedipine. Data were averaged from 4 to 10 experiments. Solid lines were fit to the data using a Hill equation (see “Materials and Methods,” equation 1). For the reduction of peak current, the Kd value was 18.6 6 2.7 mM, Hill coefficient was 0.75 6 0.04; for the reduction of steady-state current, the Kd value was 6.3 6 0.5 mM, and the Hill coefficient was 0.93 6 0.03. 1997 Nifedipine Block of hKv1.5 1251 Fig. 4. Time constants of hKv1.5 current decay in the presence of nifedipine. A, Voltage-dependence of hKv1.5 current decay in different concentrations of nifedipine. In the presence of nifedipine, t2 was the fast component obtained from biexponential fits to the falling phase of the currents obtained during 250-msec voltage steps to between 0 and 190 mV from the holding potential -80 mV. Data were mean 6 S.E. from 4 to 10 experiments. B, Kinetics of nifedipine block of hKv1.5. The reciprocal of the nifedipine-induced fast time constant (1/t2) at 140 mV has been plotted against the nifedipine concentration. The best fit to the data (solid line) using the equation 1/t25k11. [D] 1 k21 resulted in an apparent association rate constant (k11) of 5.64 3 106 M21 sec21 and an apparent dissociation rate constant (k21) of 37.5 sec21. The Kd value (k21/k11) was 6.65 mM. Error bars, S.E. from four to six experiments. Open or closed channel block? Two methods are often used to decide whether drugs predominantly interact with open or closed channels. For open channel blockers that have a slow block rate and that dissociate from closed channels, currents peak in the presence of drug at a constant level, before a rapid decay occurs with drug-channel interaction. Such an effect is seen when K1 channels are exposed to 4-aminopyridine for the first time (Choquet and Korn, 1992; Bouchard and Fedida, 1995). As a result, an acceleration of Fig. 5. Concentration-dependent rate of onset of hKv1.5 block by nifedipine. Original currents were obtained from a holding potential of -80 mV during 200-msec pulses to a test potential of 140 mV. Nifedipine sensitive current was calculated from the subtraction of steadystate currents in control and the presence of nifedipine, divided by the control current level (Ictl-Inif)/Ictl. These have been plotted against the time from the start of the voltage clamp pulse. The times of onset of block were 3.0, 2.4, 1.3, 1.1, 0.75 and 0.35 msec with 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 and 200 mM nifedipine. The solid lines were the best fits to a biexponential equation of the form [y 5 A1*exp(-t/t1) 1 A2*exp(-t/t2) 1 C]. Data shown were from two different cells. Downloaded from jpet.aspetjournals.org at ASPET Journals on June 16, 2017 current inactivation is generally inferred to mean open-channel binding (Slawsky and Castle, 1994). However, if the peak current is reduced due to rapid drug-channel interaction, as for tetrapentylammonium block of hKv1.5 (Snyders and Yeola, 1995) or in our experiments with nifedipine, it can be more difficult to exclude a resting channel block. One method to analyze the onset of block is to fit the fractional block of current back to the start of the depolarizing pulse (Slawsky and Castle, 1994). If the fit intersects zero block after the start of the pulse, a purely open channel block mechanism is favored. The time course for the development of inhibition by nifedipine is shown in figure 5. The drug-sensitive current expressed as a proportion of the outward current observed in the absence of the drug ((Ictl-Inif)/Ictl) has been plotted as a function of time after the start of depolarization (at t 5 0 msec). Inhibition increased in an exponential manner with time and it can be seen that both the maximum inhibition and the rate of development of this inhibition were concentration dependent. The voltage pulse was applied at 0 msec and the exponential onset of current block always occurred after this time. The mean times of onset of current block after application of the depolarizing clamp pulse were 3.33 6 0.18, 2.80 6 0.14, 1.56 6 0.19, 1.09 6 0.25, 0.65 6 0.35 and 0.42 6 0.30 msec with 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 and 200 mM nifedipine (n 5 3–5). At a concentration of 200 mM nifedipine, inhibition was apparent almost immediately on depolarization, as indicated from the time of intersection of the fit line with the abscissa. Clearly, block occurred with time constants not dissimilar from the time constants of current activation at the higher concentrations. These data support the idea that nifedipine binds to open channels, but it is difficult at high concentrations to exclude nifedipine binding to steps in the activation pathway during the early phase of channel opening. This open channel block was further confirmed by crossover of tail currents in the absence and presence of nifedipine. Short, 100-msec depolarizing pulses were given to fully open hKv1.5 channels and cells were then repolarized to a 1252 Zhang et al. Vol. 281 potentials of -50 mV to measure outward tail currents from deactivating channels (fig. 6A, inset). A typical example of currents is illustrated in figure 6A. In the presence of increasing concentrations of nifedipine, peak currents were reduced and current decay during voltage clamp pulses was accelerated. The tail currents from figure 6A are enlarged in figure 6B and C. In the presence of nifedipine, the initial tail current amplitude was less (slowly decaying tracings) compared with control, and there was an obvious rising phase that can be seen at the beginning of the tail current in the presence of 10 and 5 mM nifedipine, but not obvious with 2 mM nifedipine and absent in control (fig. 6C, lower panel). Then tail currents crossed over each other (fig. 6C, upper panel). Results of this nature suggest that nifedipine dissociates from deactivating channels rather slowly compared with control channel deactivation, and that nifedipine must dissociate from its binding site before channels can close. All these properties were consistent with an open channel action of nifedipine. Site of action. Nifedipine is a 1,4-dihydropyridine with a pKa # 1.0 (Uehara and Hume, 1985). Thus, at a physiological pH of 7.4, almost all of the nifedipine will be in its neutral form. As an uncharged moiety it should rapidly cross biological membranes, and thus it has a possible site of action at the outer or inner mouth of open hKv1.5 channels. It has been reported that nifedipine can block Ca11 channels from the extracellular side or penetrate the membrane to approach its binding site in the hydrophobic domain near to the extracellular side. To attempt to determine on which side of the membrane that hKv1.5 channels could be blocked by nifedipine, the efficacy of block under different macropatch recording conditions was compared. The data in figure 7A illustrate the effects of 10 and 100 mM nifedipine on the current recorded from O/O and C/A macropatches. In both cases the currents were recorded in the steady state in nifedipine, after at least 3 min exposure. In the presence of nifedipine, at similar concentrations, current was much reduced in the O/O patch mode of recording compared with the C/A patch. Summary steady-state data from two to eight cells in figure 7B shows the effect of different concentrations of nifedipine on hKv1.5 in C/A, I/O, O/O macropatches and during W/C recording. Data points were obtained by comparing the steady-state current in control and different concentrations of nifedipine under the different recording conditions. Compared with O/O macropatches and W/C recording, the current in I/O and C/A macropatches was relatively less sensitive to nifedipine. At concentrations of 1 to 5 mM nifedipine, very little block was observed in C/A macropatches, whereas at 5 mM nifedipine, current was '50% blocked in W/C and O/O macropatch recordings. The rank order of block of hKv1.5 by nifedipine was then, whole-cell ' outside-out . inside-out .. cell-attached macropatches. Analysis of variance of the results with 10, 20, 50 and 100 mM nifedipine showed that the difference of relative current between C/A or I/O macropatches and O/O macropatches or W/C recordings was statistically significant (P , .05), the difference between O/O macropatches and W/C recording was not statistically significant (P . .05). Our rationale for determining the likely site of action of nifedipine is based on our assumption that variations in the efficacy of block by nifedipine are closely related to the local concentrations of nifedipine under different recording condi- Downloaded from jpet.aspetjournals.org at ASPET Journals on June 16, 2017 Fig. 6. Deactivation tail current crossover caused by nifedipine. A, Under W/C recording conditions, cell was held at -80 mV and stepped to 140 mV for 100 msec, then stepped back to -50 mV as shown by the protocol inset in A. Tail currents were recorded during the last voltage step to -50 mV. Superimposed currents are shown in control and the presence of 2, 5 and 10 mM nifedipine. B, Deactivation tail currents from panel A (dotted box) were enlarged to illustrate cross-over of control and in the presence of 2, 5 and 10 mM nifedipine. C, Tail currents in B were enlarged again to show crossover clearly (upper panel, in the presence of 5 mM nifedipine) and the rising phase at the beginning of tail currents (lower panel) in the presence of 2, 5 and 10 mM nifedipine, with the control tracing for comparison. 1997 tions. If the binding site of nifedipine is at or near to the extracellular side, during W/C recording when nifedipine was superfused into the bath, it can bind to its receptor directly and efficiently. For the C/A macropatches, when nifedipine is added to the bath, it has to enter the cell, cross the patch and block from the pipette side. As the pipette filling solution contains no nifedipine, it provides a large volume into which nifedipine at the extracellular face of the patch would be rapidly diluted away by the pipette constituents. This is likely to reduce the effective local concentration of nifedipine at the extracellular side of the patch in the C/A configuration and thus decrease the efficacy of nifedipine block of hKv1.5. A similar explanation can be applied to the results from I/O 1253 (decreased efficacy of block) and O/O (high efficacy of block) macropatch configurations. In confirmation of these results nifedipine added to the pipette filling solution had little effect on whole cell currents. An important characteristic of open channel blocking drugs that act on voltage-gated Kv channels at the internal face of the membrane is that they usually cause channel gating charge immobilization. This has been shown to be true for tetraethylammonium ions (Stühmer et al., 1991; Bezanilla et al., 1991), for 4-aminopyridine (Bouchard and Fedida, 1995; McCormack et al., 1994) and quinidine (Fedida, 1997). It seems that the charged drug binding to sites at the inner mouth of the pore somehow prevents some outward movement or rapid return of the voltage sensor on repolarization. This leads to the reduction or slowed movements of different components of gating charge. This may be because of their charge that directly influences surface charge at the inner mouth of the pore. Alternatively, the channels may be unable to return to their resting conformation until the drugs dissociate, due to steric effects of the drugs hindering channel closure. This latter mechanism of immobilization does not depend on charged forms of the drugs. We have postulated earlier that nifedipine exerts its action towards the extracellular surface, and thus we do not expect large effects on hKv1.5 gating currents. The effect of different concentrations of nifedipine on typical hKv1.5 gating currents is illustrated in figure 8. Ionic currents were eliminated by substitution of all permeant monovalent ions in the pipette and extracellular solutions with NMG (see “Materials and Methods”). In transfected HEK cells, data corrected for leak revealed rapid transient currents on depolarization and repolarization (fig. 8, A and C). The holding potential was -100 mV. The gating currents on depolarization (on-gating current) reached their peak between 2.2 and 0.5 msec, dependent on the pulse potential. Note that this time is theoretically well within the time resolution of the recording system that is limited by the cell size and access characteristics. As noted previously, peak gating current increased with depolarization, although total charge moved (Qon) eventually saturated (Bezanilla et al., 1991; McCormack et al., 1994; Bouchard and Fedida, 1995) (fig. 8, E and F). The more rapid decay of on-gating current underlies the increasingly rapid activation of ionic current with larger depolarizations. The peak gating current on repolarization (off-gating current) was reduced and the decay of off-gating current slowed for larger depolarizations, and this also is known to occur in Shaker K1 channels (Stefani et al., 1994). Upon repolarization, gating charge (Qoff) returns, and although slower for large positive depolarizations, it was well conserved, with the ratio Qoff/Qon usually close to 1.0. In the presence of nifedipine (fig. 8, B and D), on and off-gating currents were very similar to those seen in control at concentrations of nifedipine from 5 to 50 mM. However, mean data (fig. 8, E and F) revealed a small reduction in off-gating charge after depolarizations to more positive potentials than 0 mV at both 5 and 50 mM nifedipine. The reductions were statistically significant at potentials positive to 0 mV (paired t test, P , .05). This arises from an increased immobilization of off-gating current at potentials at which channels are open and suggests that nifedipine block of open hKv1.5 channels is associated with some inhibition of conformational changes that accompany channel closing. However, these changes are very small compared with the actions of drugs at the intra- Downloaded from jpet.aspetjournals.org at ASPET Journals on June 16, 2017 Fig. 7. Comparison of nifedipine-induced block of hKv1.5 in different recording configurations. A, For O/O macropatch (left panel), current traces were elicited from the holding potential of -80 mV during a 400-msec pulse to the test potential of 140 mV. For the C/A macropatch (right panel), traces were obtained from the holding potential of 180 mV to a pipette test potential of -40 mV in a 200-msec pulse. Traces shown were from two different cells in which currents were recorded in the absence and presence of 10 and 100 mM nifedipine. Note that nifedipine actions on hKv1.5 were stable after only two or three pulses after nifedipine was washed into the bath. However, all steady-state data shown here, and in B were obtained after more than 3 min exposure to nifedipine. B, The relative steady-state currents (Inif/Ictl) in the presence of different concentrations of nifedipine have been obtained from four modes of patch clamp recording. These were C/A (F), I/O (E) and O/O (ç) macropatches, and W/C (É) recording. Current were obtained during the same voltage protocol as illustrated in A. Solid lines were the best fits to the data using Hill equation (see “Materials and Methods,” equation 1). For the data from C/A, I/O, O/O macropatches and W/C recording, the resultant Kd were 47.3 6 10.1, 7.5 6 1.5, 6.9 6 1.0, 6.7 6 0.6 mM and Hill coefficients were 0.88 6 0.05, 0.70 6 0.06, 0.90 6 0.06, 0.95 6 0.04, respectively. Data were means 6 S.E. from three to seven experiments. The asterisk represents a statistically significant (P , .05) difference between the C/A or I/O macropatch data and O/O macropatch or W/C data. Nifedipine Block of hKv1.5 1254 Zhang et al. Vol. 281 cellular mouth of K1 channels, and seem unlikely to be related to the ionic current block by nifedipine which has a Kd of 6.3 mM at 140 mV (fig. 2C). Discussion We have investigated the mechanism of action of nifedipine on the hKv1.5 channel expressed in a human cell system. Nifedipine is a tissue-specific Ca11 channel antagonist that has a major role in the vascular bed where it is an effective vasodilator. In our study nifedipine also produced a strong block of a human heart Kv channel. Nifedipine blocks hKv1.5 with a low Kd. Nifedipine is a widely used Ca11 antagonist and has been shown to block native Ca11 channels with Kd in the range of 200 to 310 nM (Charnet et al., 1987; Mecca and Love, 1992). Cloned Ca11 channels are also blocked by dihydropyridines and phenylalkylamines with Kds in the 100s of nM to low mM range (Schuster et al., 1996). Nifedipine blockade of native cardiac potassium channels has also been reported. Transient outward potassium currents It in rabbit atrium (Gotoh et al., 1991) and Ito in rat ventricular myocytes (Jahnel et al., 1994) were largely blocked by 30 mM nifedipine and the blockade was concentration-dependent. Besides the block of potassium channels in intact myocytes, nifedipine also caused the block of cloned potassium channel hKv1.5 with a Kd of 81 mM (Grissmer et al., 1994). Our data in figures 1 and 2 demonstrated that nifedipine accelerated the time course of decay of hKv1.5 currents. Currents reached a peak that was less than corresponding control currents at concentrations greater than the Kd. Subsequently nifedipine caused a rapid current decay that was concentration dependent. Such effects of nifedipine allowed us to calculate dose-response curves for both the peak and steady-state outward currents (fig. 2). Fits of the Hill equation to these data gave Kd values of 18.6 6 2.7 and 6.3 6 0.5 mM for peak and steady-state currents, respectively, with Hill coefficients of 0.75 6 0.04 and 0.93 6 0.03. The peak current measurement represented the partial block of current by nifedipine, and the interaction between rates of channel opening and the onset of block at different pulse potentials and nifedipine concentrations (see below). For this reason, the Kd value (18.6 mM) was expected to be lower than for steady-state block of open channels (6.3 mM). The nonsteady-state value for the Hill coefficient that was measured (0.75) from the peak current dose-response cannot then be used to indicate cooperativity. The measurement of steadystate current block reflected the equilibrated interaction of hKv1.5 channels with nifedipine at different concentrations and potentials and was of more interest in the present study. The Hill coefficient close to 1.0 for steady-state current block suggests that binding of one nifedipine molecule per channel Downloaded from jpet.aspetjournals.org at ASPET Journals on June 16, 2017 Fig. 8. Effect of nifedipine on gating currents of hKv1.5 channel. A and B, Data in panel A and B are the gating currents of hKv1.5 channel in the absence (A) and presence (B) of 5 mM nifedipine. Cell was depolarized from -100 to 170 mV for 12 msec from a holding potential of -100 mV to initiate the on-gating current, then repolarized to -100 mV to record offgating current. Traces shown are from -70 to 130 mV in increments of 120 mV. C and D, Data from a different cell in the absence (C) and presence (D) of 50 mM nifedipine. Traces were elicited using the same voltage protocol as in panels A and B. E and F, Integrated on- (E) and off- (É) gating charge movement in the presence of 5 mM (E) and 50 mM (F) nifedipine expressed relative to the maximum on- (F) and off- (ç) gating charge movement in controls. Data were means 6 S.E. from four (F) or six (E) experiments. The asterisk represents a statistically significant (P , .05) difference between off-gating charge movement in control and in the presence of nifedipine. 1997 1255 the dose response curve in figure 2C. It should be noted that t2 represents the transition from the open to block state and does not hold at small depolarizations (,0 mV), where activation is much slower, or at high drug concentrations, in which case the time constant of block may be similar to that of activation. In these cases the binding and unbinding rates of nifedipine cannot be extracted from a simple model such as that given above. Voltage-dependence of block. In some K1 channels voltage-dependence of nifedipine block has been described. In rat alveolar-epithelial cells an inactivating delayed rectifier K1 channel demonstrated a voltage-dependent tblock (Jacobs and DeCoursey, 1990). In frog atrial myocytes, block of Ik by nisoldipine, a nifedipine analogue was voltage dependent (Hume, 1985). Our data in figure 3 showed that current was blocked quickly by nifedipine in the voltage range of channel opening. After channels were fully open, block was slightly relieved at more positive voltages. This relief of block was independent of the concentration of nifedipine between 5 and 50 mM (fig. 3), and was well fitted to a linear function (fig. 3). The slopes of the fits were approximately similar, between 0.75 3 1023 and 1.5 3 1023 mV21, and these quantify the increase in normalized current with depolarizations in the presence of the drug. At the same time, data in figure 4A indicate that once channels were fully open (.130 mV), there was a shallow decrease in the time constants of block with potential. From the above and a consideration of equation 2a and 2b, these data indicate that the voltage-dependence to the block must be given by an increase in the off-rate (k21) rather than a decrease in the on-rate (k11) at more positive potentials. There are a number of possible explanations for this. First, although nifedipine is uncharged, its binding site may be coupled to some voltage-dependent process, such as conformational changes in the pore with potential or movement of the voltage sensor (Jacobs and DeCoursey, 1990), which can sense the transmembrane voltage change and confer voltage-dependence to block by an uncharged drug. It has been proposed by De Coursey that neutral phenylalkylamine drugs may have rapid access to their receptors, where block is then stabilized by protonation of the drugs (DeCoursey, 1995). Although nifedipine has a much lower pKa, such a mechanism could explain the voltage-dependence observed in the present experiments. Nifedipine site of action. An alternative explanation for the voltage-dependence of block could be that nifedipine blocks open K1 channels from an external site. It is possible that at more positive voltages, potassium permeation increases and hinders in some manner the binding of nifedipine to its site with a resultant relief of block. Analogous with this, it is known that K1 occupancy of sites in the external mouth of the K1 channel pore affects the rate at which charged blockers (ions) can interact with the channel (Baukrowitz and Yellen, 1996). We have established that nifedipine induced open-channel block of hKv1.5 and two additional lines of evidence suggest that the site is in the external mouth of the pore. The rank order of block described in figure 7 was W/C ' O/O . I/O .. C/A macropatch. This suggested a preferential nifedipine block of hKv1.5 channels from the extracellular side or at a hydrophobic domain accessible from the extracellular surface. A similar conclusion has been drawn for native K1 channels (Jacobs and DeCoursey, 1990; although see DeCoursey, 1995) and for the dihydropyridine Downloaded from jpet.aspetjournals.org at ASPET Journals on June 16, 2017 is sufficient to block the hKv1.5 channel. Although nifedipine also showed some effects on endogenous current of HEK cells, the average amplitude was about 2 to 3% of the hKv1.5 current. The endogenous current was also less sensitive to nifedipine, so was unlikely to significantly distort our quantitation of hKv1.5 current block by nifedipine in HEK cells. The Kd of 6.3 6 0.5 mM for hKv1.5 expressed in HEK cells was an order of magnitude lower than for an isoform of hKv1.5 (HPCN1) (Grissmer et al., 1994) expressed in MEL cells. Possible reasons for this difference are the different mammalian expression systems (MEL vs. HEK cells) and small structural differences between the two isoforms of hKv1.5 used here (fHK vs. HPCN1), although it should be noted that these isoforms are identical throughout the S4-S6 gating and pore regions. We found that photoinactivation of the drug occurred readily in the cloned cell system and when making measurements with nifedipine it was necessary to carry out all experiments in the dark. A Kd in the low micromolar range, and threshold effects in the 100 nM range make nifedipine a potent blocker of hKv1.5. No studies have addressed block of specific components of cardiac K1 current in intact human myocytes by nifedipine, so at the present time it is not possible to relate our observations directly to currents in human heart. Time dependence of block and open channel block. Our data indicated that nifedipine block of hKv1.5 showed marked time-dependence. Block increased in an exponential manner during the depolarizing pulses (fig. 2), and the onset of block occurred sharply after current activation (figs. 3 and 5). Nifedipine also modified the tail current (fig. 6). Upon repolarization, control channel deactivation was fast and virtually irreversible (fig. 6A). Open-channel models predict that if a large fraction of the channels is blocked at the start of repolarization and the unbinding rate (k21) is fast enough, then the tail may display a rising phase reflecting the unblocking from blocked to open state. Subsequently, the tail should deactivate more slowly than in control, because some unblocked channels become blocked again, depending on the relative rate constants for the open to blocked state and the open to closed state. Current traces in figure 6C (lower panel) show that a rising phase was prominent with 10 and 5 mM, but less so with 2 mM nifedipine and absent in control. Subsequently tail currents cross-over as channels in the presence of nifedipine move more slowly from the blocked state to open and closed states than in control (fig. 6, B and C, upper panel) (Snyders et al., 1992; Fedida, 1997). From the results discussed above we conclude that nifedipine binds to the open state of the channel. The rate of current decay in the control could be fitted to a single exponential function, and in the presence of nifedipine, the inactivation became biexponential. The nifedipine-induced extra component of inactivation had a time constant that was much faster than that of slow inactivation; therefore, this fast time constant (t2) can be considered to represent the interaction of nifedipine with the open state, t2 5 1/(k11 [D] 1 k21), as described before (Snyders et al., 1992; Slawsky and Castle, 1994). Based on this interaction, the apparent association and apparent dissociation rate constants for nifedipine obtained from figure 4B were k11 5 5.64 3 106 M21 sec21 and k21 5 37.5 sec21, respectively. The resultant Kd value from equation [2b] (see “Materials and Methods”) was 6.65 mM, which is similar to the Kd value from Nifedipine Block of hKv1.5 1256 Zhang et al. 11 References BAUKROWITZ, T. AND YELLEN, G.: Use-dependent blockers and exit rate of the last ion from the multi-ion pore of a K1 channel. Science 271: 653–656, 1996. BEZANILLA, F., PEROZO, E., PAPAZIAN, D. M. 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J.: Improved patch-clamp techniques for high-resolution current recording from cells and cell-free membrane patches. Pflugers Arch. 391: 85–100, 1981. HUME, J. R.: Comparative interactions of organic Ca11 channel antagonists with myocardial Ca11 and K1 channels. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 234: 134–140, 1985. JACOBS, E. R. AND DECOURSEY, T. E.: Mechanisms of potassium channel block in rat alveolar epithelial cells. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 255: 459–472, 1990. JAHNEL, U., KLEMM, P. AND NAWRATH, H.: Different mechanisms of the inhibition of the transient outward current in rat ventricular myocytes. Naunyn Schmiedeberg Arch. Pharmacol. 349: 87–94, 1994. JAN, L. Y. AND JAN, Y.: Voltage-sensitive ion channels. Cell 56: 13–25, 1989. MCCORMACK, K., JOINER, W. J. AND HEINEMANN, S. H.: A characterization of the activating structural rearrangements in voltage-dependent Shaker K1 channels. Neuron 12: 301–315, 1994. MECCA, T. E. AND LOVE, S. 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AND HOFMANN, F.: The IVS6 segment of the L-type calcium channel is critical for the action of dihydropyridines and phenylalkylamines. EMBO J. 15: 2365–2370, 1996. SLAWSKY, M. T. AND CASTLE, N. A.: K1 channel blocking actions of flecainide compared with those of propafenone and quinidine in adult rat ventricular myocytes. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 269: 66–74, 1994. SNYDERS, D. J., KNOTH, K. M., ROBERDS, S. L. AND TAMKUN, M. M.: Time-, voltage-, and state-dependent block by quinidine of a cloned human cardiac potassium channel. Mol. Pharmacol. 41: 322–330, 1992. SNYDERS, D. J. AND YEOLA, S. W.: Determinants of antiarrhythmic drug action - Electrostatic and hydrophobic components of block of the human cardiac hKv1.5 channel. Circ. Res. 77: 575–583, 1995. STEFANI, E., TORO, L., PEROZO, E. AND BEZANILLA, F.: Gating of Shaker K1 channels: I. Ionic and gating currents. Biophys. J. 66: 996–1010, 1994. STÜHMER, W., CONTI, F., STOCKER, M., PONGS, O. AND HEINEMANN, S. H.: Gating currents of inactivating and non-inactivating potassium channel expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Pflugers Arch. 410: 423–429, 1991. TAMKUN, M. M., KNOTH, K. M., WALBRIDGE, J. A., KROEMER, H., RODEN, D. M. AND GLOVER, D. H.: Molecular cloning and characterization of two voltage-gated K1 channel cDNAs from human ventricle. FASEB J. 5: 331–337, 1991. UEHARA, A. AND HUME, J. R.: Interactions of organic calcium channel antagonists with calcium channels in single frog atrial cells. J. Gen. Physiol. 85: 621–647, 1985. VAN WAGONER, D. R., KIRIAN, M. AND LAMORGESE, M.: Phenylephrine suppresses outward K1 currents in rat atrial myocytes. Am. J. Physiol. Heart Circ. Physiol. 271: H937–H946, 1996. Send reprint requests to: Dr. David Fedida, Department of Physiology, Botterell Hall, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, K7L 3N6. Downloaded from jpet.aspetjournals.org at ASPET Journals on June 16, 2017 binding site in Ca channels (Nakayama et al., 1991; Schuster et al., 1996), where it is thought that the dihydropyridines block the channel from the extracellular side and mutations in repeat IVS6 affect binding (Schuster et al., 1996). The second line of evidence is based on the gating current measurements (fig. 8). At concentrations required to produce approximate 50% block of ionic current, nifedipine had only very small effects on hKv1.5 gating currents. This suggests a binding site distant from the intracellular mouth of the pore, where binding of numerous drugs immobilizes gating charge (Stühmer et al., 1991; Fedida, 1997). At high concentrations, on-gating currents of hKv1.5 did not change in the presence of nifedipine compared with the control, but off-gating currents in the presence of nifedipine were reduced at voltages positive to 110 mV (fig. 8F), in the voltage range that channels open. This also supports the idea that nifedipine can bind only to channels in the open state, i.e., at some site exposed when the pore opens. If we speculate that nifedipine acts at the external mouth of open K1 channels as suggested above, and that binding is coupled in a 1:1 stoichiometry with a univalent entity (i.e., K1 ions) that senses the transmembrane electric field, we can apply equation 3 to observed block (data in fig. 3), with z 5 1. The data were well fitted to this model, between 120 and 190 mV, at nifedipine concentrations of 5, 10, 20 and 50 mM. The fractional distance, d, was calculated to be between 0.12 and 0.16. This suggested that nifedipine binding may be coupled to a charged process that sensed '15% of the transmembrane electric field, from the outside, at its binding site. If a higher valence for the coupling entity was assumed (i.e., z 5 2 or 3), d was reduced proportionally, so the value of 0.12 to 0.16 gives an upper limit for the distance into the field. Further experiments, perhaps utilizing mutated forms of Kv channels, are required to understand the apparent voltagedependence of nifedipine block of K1 channels, both in native systems (Jacobs and DeCoursey, 1990) and in our cloned channel system. Vol. 281