Mechanical, ischemic, and inflammatory injuries to voltage-gated sodium channel (Nav)-rich membranes of axon initial segments and nodes of Ranvier render Nav channels dangerously leaky. By what means? The behavior of recombinant Nav1.6 (Wang et al., 2009) leads us to postulate that, in neuropathologic conditions, structural degradation of axolemmal bilayer fosters chronically left-shifted Nav channel operation, resulting in E(Na) rundown. This "sick excitable cell Nav-leak" would encompass left-shifted fast- and slow-mode based persistent I(Na) (i.e., I(window) and slow-inactivating I(Na)). Bilayer-damage-induced electrophysiological dysfunctions of native-Nav channels, and effects on inhibitors on those channels, should, we suggest, be studied in myelinated axons, exploiting I(Na)(V,t) hysteresis data from sawtooth ramp clamp. We hypothesize that (like dihydropyridines for Ca channels), protective lipophilic Nav antagonists would partition more avidly into disorderly bilayers than into the well-packed bilayers characteristic of undamaged, healthy plasma membrane. Whereas inhibitors using aqueous routes would access all Navs equally, differential partitioning into "sick bilayer" would co-localize lipophilic antagonists with "sick-Nav channels," allowing for more specific targeting of impaired cells. Molecular fine-tuning of Nav antagonists to favor more avid partitioning into damaged than into intact bilayers could reduce side effects. In potentially salvageable neurons of traumatic and/or ischemic penumbras, in inflammatory neuropathies, in muscular dystrophy, in myocytes of cardiac infarct borders, Nav-leak driven excitotoxicity overwhelms cellular repair mechanisms. Precision-tuning of a lipophilic Nav antagonist for greatest efficacy in mildly damaged membranes could render it suitable for the prolonged continuous administration needed to allow for the remodeling of the excitable membranes, and thus functional recovery.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2012.00019 | DOI Listing |
Basic Clin Pharmacol Toxicol
November 2023
Laboratório de Cardiobiologia, Departamento de Biofísica, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP), São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Eugenol is an aromatic compound used in the manufacture of medicines, perfumes, cosmetics and as an anaesthetic due to the ability of the drug to block the neuronal isoform of voltage-gated Na channels (Na ). Some arrhythmias are associated with gain of function in the sodium current (I ) found in cardiomyocytes, and antiarrhythmic sodium channel blockers are commonly used in the clinical practice. This study sought to elucidate the potential mechanisms of eugenol's protection in the arrhythmic model of ouabain-induced arrhythmias in guinea pig heart.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLife Sci
October 2021
Laboratório de Biofísica e Farmacologia do Coração, Departamento de Educação (Campus XII), Universidade do Estado da Bahia (UNEB), Guanambi, Bahia, Brazil; Laboratório de Cardiobiologia, Departamento de Biofísica, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP), São Paulo, Brazil. Electronic address:
Aims: Eugenol is a natural compound found in the essential oils of many aromatic plants. The compound is used as a local anesthetic because of its inhibitory effect on the voltage-gated Na channels (Na), which are expressed in the nociceptive neurons. Eugenol has shown wide range of activities in the cardiovascular system; most of these activities are attributed to the modulation of voltage-sensitive Ca channels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Top Membr
March 2019
Senior Scientist Emeritus, Neuroscience, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
When they become simultaneously leaky to both Na and Cl, excitable cells are vulnerable to potentially lethal cytotoxic swelling. Swelling ensues in spite of an isosmotic milieu because the entering ions add osmolytes to the cytoplasm's high concentration of impermeant anionic osmolytes. An influx of osmotically-obliged water is unavoidable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHandb Exp Pharmacol
September 2018
Neurosciences, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Two features common to diverse sick excitable cells are "leaky" Nav channels and bleb damage-damaged membranes. The bleb damage, we have argued, causes a channel kinetics based "leakiness." Recombinant (node of Ranvier type) Nav1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Comput Biol
January 2013
Department of Physics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
In injured neurons, "leaky" voltage-gated sodium channels (Nav) underlie dysfunctional excitability that ranges from spontaneous subthreshold oscillations (STO), to ectopic (sometimes paroxysmal) excitation, to depolarizing block. In recombinant systems, mechanical injury to Nav1.6-rich membranes causes cytoplasmic Na(+)-loading and "Nav-CLS", i.
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