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Vol. 289, Issue 3, 1688-1696, June 1999
Graduate School of Agriculture, Tohoku University, Aoba-ku, Sendai,
Japan (M.Y.Y., A.S., T.Y.); and Department of Physiology, School of
Medicine, Nagoya University, Showa-ku, Nagoya, Japan (A.T.)
The widely used sodium channel blocker tetrodotoxin (TTX) is a compound
that has six hydroxyl residues at the C-4, C-6, C-8, C-9, C-10, and
C-11 positions in addition to a guanidinium group, which is positively
charged in biological pH range. Thirteen analogs of this toxin with
structural modifications involving one or more of these hydroxyls were
examined on their affinity to a rat brain membrane preparation, which
is known to contain sodium channels abundantly. The equilibrium
dissociation constants associated with the binding of TTX and its
analogs to the sodium channels were estimated, from their ability to
inhibit the binding of [3H]saxitoxin, as follows
(in nM): TTX, 1.8; chiriquitoxin, 1.0; 11-oxoTTX, 1.5;
11-norTTX-6,6-diol, 1.6; 11-norTTX-6(S)-ol, 23; 11-norTTX-6(R)-ol, 31; 11-deoxyTTX, 37;
6-epiTTX, 39; 4-epiTTX, 68;
4,9-anhydroTTX, 180; TTX-8-O-hemisuccinate, >380;
TTX-11-carboxylic acid, >2300; tetrodonic acid, >3600;
5,6,11-trideoxyTTX, >5000. The reduction of the affinity observed with
the analogs involving reduction or translocation of the hydroxyls at
C-6 and C-11 is indicative of the contribution of these residues to the
binding to sodium channels as hydrogen bond donors. The especially
large value of the dissociation constant for TTX-11-carboxylic acid is
consistent with the idea that the C-11-hydroxyl forms a hydrogen bond
with a carboxylic acid residue of the channel protein. The markedly low
affinity of TTX-8-O-hemisuccinate may possibly be ascribable to intramolecular salt-bridge formation, which neutralizes the positive charge of the guanidinium group.
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