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Vol. 280, Issue 3, 1170-1175, 1997
Departments of Medicine (D.J.S., D.M.R.) and Pharmacology (T.Y., D.J.S., D.M.R.), Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee
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Abstract |
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OPC-18790 is a vesnarinone analog currently in clinical trials for treatment of heart failure. In vitro studies have shown that, in addition to its positive inotropic actions, OPC-18790 prolongs cardiac action potentials. Therefore, in this study, the effects of OPC-18790 on cardiac potassium currents were compared with those we previously observed for the blockers quinidine and dofetilide in two test systems, i.e., L-cells stably transfected with mammalian cardiac potassium channel clones (Kv1.4, Kv1.5 and Kv2.1) and mouse AT-1 cells, in which the rapidly inactivating component of the cardiac delayed rectifier (IKr) is the major repolarizing current. In L-cells, 10 to 100 µM OPC-18790 reduced Kv1.4, Kv1.5 and Kv2.1 currents by <30%, whereas quinidine was a more potent blocker (EC50 < 10 µM) and the IKr-specific blocker dofetilide was without effect. In contrast, in AT-1 cells, OPC-18790 blocked IKr with an EC50 (0.96 ± 0.12 µM, n = 10) similar to that of quinidine (0.9 ± 0.2 µM). For both drugs, block was voltage dependent, increasing at positive potentials. OPC-18790 and quinidine showed no frequency dependence, implying block of resting channels and/or very rapid block of open channels; this is in contrast to dofetilide, which displayed slow onset kinetics of block. Thus, we conclude that, 1) unlike quinidine, OPC-18790 does not significantly inhibit currents obtained by expression of the cardiac potassium channel clones Kv1.4, Kv1.5 and Kv2.1; 2) like quinidine and dofetilide, OPC-18790 blocks IKr in AT-1 cells, but the kinetics of block onset more closely resemble those of quinidine than dofetilide; and 3) block of IKr appears to be an important mechanism underlying the action potential-prolonging properties of OPC-18790.
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Introduction |
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Phosphodiesterase inhibition is a
therapeutic strategy that may increase cardiac contractility and is
therefore under intense investigation for patients with heart failure
(Packer, 1993
). However, a number of studies have suggested that,
although phosphodiesterase inhibitors can transiently improve the
symptoms of congestive heart failure, the mortality rate is unaffected
or even increased (Nony et al., 1994
). The investigational
agent vesnarinone may be an exception. At 60 mg/day, vesnarinone both
improved symptoms and reduced the mortality rate for patients with
congestive heart failure, compared with placebo (Packer, 1993
; Feldman
et al., 1993
). At a higher dose (120 mg/day), the mortality
rate was increased. The mechanism underlying a possible beneficial
effect of vesnarinone on the mortality rate is uncertain. An inhibitory
effect of cytokines in patients with heart failure has been suggested
(Matsui et al., 1994
; Shioi et al., 1994
;
Matsumori et al., 1994
). Others have suggested the
possibility that the drug exerts antiarrhythmic actions distinct from
its phosphodiesterase-inhibiting effect (Lathrop et al.,
1989
; Packer, 1993
). Indeed, vesnarinone has been reported to prolong
action potential duration in rabbit, guinea pig and human ventricular
myocytes (Lathrop et al., 1993
), an effect attributed to
increased L-type calcium current and/or decreased delayed rectifier
current.
OPC-18790 is a vesnarinone analog that is currently in clinical trials
for acute i.v. therapy of severe heart failure. Like vesnarinone,
OPC-18790 increases action potential duration (Hosokawa et
al., 1992
) and has been reported to stimulate calcium currents (Wu
et al., 1993
). In animal models, it increases contractility; at high dosages, it aggravated halothane/adrenaline-induced ventricular tachycardia (Wu et al., 1993
).
A common mechanism for action potential prolongation is block of
cardiac potassium currents. The present study was conducted to
determine the effect of OPC-18790 on cardiac potassium currents and to
compare its effects with those of the antiarrhythmic agents quinidine
and dofetilide, which are known to block these currents. Two model
systems were used, i.e., mammalian cells stably transfected with cDNAs encoding cardiac potassium channels (Snyders et
al., 1993b
) and mouse AT-1 cells (atrial tumor myocytes), in which IKr is the major repolarizing current (Yang et
al., 1994b
). IKr is the target of specific
methanesulfonanilide inhibitors, such as dofetilide (Carmeliet, 1993a
;
Jurkiewicz and Sanguinetti, 1993
). The characteristics of
IKr inhibition by dofetilide in AT-1 cells have been
previously reported (Yang et al., 1995
), as has block of
IKr in AT-1 cells (Yang and Roden, 1996
) and other cardiac myocytes (Carmeliet, 1993b
) by relatively low concentrations of quinidine. In addition, the blocking action of quinidine on currents obtained by expression of the human cardiac potassium channel gene
Kv1.5 in L-cells has been described (Snyders et al., 1992
). Portions of this work have been presented in abstract form (Yang et al., 1994a
).
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Materials and Methods |
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AT-1 cell culture methods.
The detailed methods have been
reported previously (Yang et al., 1994b
). In brief, AT-1
cells were isolated from s.c. tumors we propagated in [C57BL/6J × DBA/2J]F1 female mice (The Jackson Laboratory, Bar
Harbor, ME). To isolate cells, live, whole mice were placed in 70%
ethanol for sterilization. The tumor mass was excised, rinsed with PBS,
minced finely and placed for 1 hr at 37°C, with gentle rocking, in
PBS containing penicillin/streptomycin (100 U/ml penicillin and 100 µg/ml streptomycin; Gibco) and 0.1% collagenase. The cell suspension
was centrifuged, washed with PBS, resuspended and then plated at a
density of 250 to 325 × 103 cells/ml in 10-mm
Primaria dishes (Falcon). The medium [PC1 (Ventrex Laboratories),
which included penicillin/streptomycin, 10% fetal bovine serum and 10 nM dexamethasone] was changed every other day until cells were used.
For electrophysiological studies, cells were removed from the culture
dish by 2-min exposure to a trypsin-containing solution (0.125% in
calcium/magnesium-free Hanks' solution), decanted into sterile culture
tubes (without trypsin) and maintained at room temperature for 2 to 4 hr before study.
L-cell culture.
The methods used to establish expression of
cardiac potassium channel genes in cloned mouse fibroblasts
(Ltk
cells, or L-cells) have been described
previously (Snyders et al., 1992
, 1993a
). Transfected cells
were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented
with 10% horse serum and 0.25 mg/ml G418 (GIBCO, Grand Island, NY), in
a 5% CO2 atmosphere. The cultures were passaged every 3 to
5 days, by brief trypsinization. The transfection vector included a
dexamethasone-inducible promoter. Therefore, before
electrophysiological experiments, subconfluent cultures were incubated
with 2 µM dexamethasone for 24 hr. The cells were then removed from
the dish with a cell scraper, and the cell suspension was stored at
room temperature and used within 12 hr for the experiments described
here.
Electrophysiological methods.
Electrophysiological
recordings were performed at room temperature (22-23°C) using an
Axopatch-1A patch-clamp amplifier (Axon Instruments, Inc., Foster City,
CA), in the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique.
After the whole-cell configuration was established, the capacitive
transients elicited by symmetrical 10-mV voltage-clamp steps from
80
mV were recorded at 50 kHz (filtered at a bandwidth of 10 kHz,
3 dB)
for calculation of capacitive surface area; capacitance and series
resistance compensation were then optimized. To record potassium
currents, the extracellular solution was normal Tyrode's solution,
containing 130 mM NaCl, 4 mM KCl, 1.8 mM CaCl2, 1 mM
MgCl2, 10 mM 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid and 10 mM glucose, with the pH adjusted to 7.35 with NaOH. The
intracellular pipette filling solution contained 110 mM KCl, 5 mM
tetrapotassium
1,2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N
,N
-tetraacetic acid, 5 mM K2ATP, 1 mM MgCl2 and 10 mM
4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid, and the solution
was adjusted to pH 7.2 with KOH, yielding a final intracellular
K+ concentration of ~145 mM. L-type calcium currents were
blocked with 0.5 µM nisoldipine. A holding potential of
40 mV was
used in AT-1 cells to inactivate inward currents through sodium or T-type calcium channels, as well as rarely observed transient outward
components (Yang et al., 1995
). For L-cell experiments, negative holding potentials (
80 to
100 mV) could be used, because sham-transfected cells display no endogenous currents. OPC-18790 was
provided by Otsuka America Pharmaceutical Co. (Rockville, MD). Drug
(0.1-100 µM) from a 10 mM stock solution (3.8 mg/ml) in lactic acid
was added to Tyrode's solution to yield the final concentration in
each experiment. The pH of the drug-containing solution was adjusted to
7.35. There was no effect of low concentrations (0.1-1.0%) of lactic
acid alone in these studies.
Data analysis.
To compare current densities among cells,
currents are reported as current per unit capacitance (picoampere per
picofarad) after linear leak subtraction and normalization to cell
surface area determined by measurement of capacitance, as described
above. The drug concentration blocking 50% of the current,
IC50, was determined using a Hill function,
y = 1/{1 + ([D]/IC50)}, where [D]
is the drug concentration. Mono- or biexponential functions were fit to
data as previously described (Yang et al., 1994b
). Comparisons were performed by Student's t test. Results are
reported as mean ± 1 S.E.
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Results |
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Effects in L-cells.
Previous studies showed that quinidine
blocked Kv1.5 expressed in L-cells with an EC50 of ~6
µM (Snyders et al., 1992
). In the same system, a high
concentration of OPC-18790 (100 µM) reduced steady-state Kv1.5
current by 12 ± 1% (n = 4), without markedly altering its kinetics (fig. 1). Expression of Kv2.1 cDNA
also resulted in a slowly inactivating, delayed rectifier phenotype; as
with Kv1.5, 100 µM OPC-18790 had little effect on steady-state Kv2.1
current, reducing it by 23 ± 3% (n = 3). Whereas
expression of Kv1.5 or Kv2.1 resulted in a noninactivating or slowly
inactivating current, expression of Kv1.4 resulted in a rapidly
inactivating current (fig. 1), whose amplitude was also only slightly
decreased (by 28 ± 3%, n = 3) by 100 µM
OPC-18790. This high concentration did appear to slow Kv1.4
inactivation. Under control conditions, inactivation during a pulse to
+50 mV was biexponential, with time constants of 15.7 ± 0.2 and
51.3 ± 0.9 msec; with 100 µM OPC-18790, the time constants were
significantly (P < .001) longer (18.4 ± 0.5 and 80.1 ± 3.9 msec).
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Effects on IKr.
Figure
3A shows IKr traces obtained from a
holding potential of
40 mV, followed by a 1-sec depolarizing step to
+20 mV and a step back to
40 mV. In the absence of drug, a prominent,
time-dependent, activating current was seen during the depolarizing
pulse, with a slowly deactivating tail current after the pulse. The
magnitude of the tail current is determined by the number of channels
open at the end of the depolarizing pulse. The "hook" at the onset of the tail current is thought to represent recovery from fast inactivation, as described for IKr-like currents in other
systems (Shibasaki, 1987
; Sanguinetti et al., 1995
; Snyders
and Chaudary, 1996
; Liu et al., 1996
). Figure 3B shows that
OPC-18790 is a relatively potent IKr blocker, with an
EC50 of 0.96 ± 0.12 µM (n = 10),
which is virtually identical to the value we previously derived for quinidine (1.0 ± 0.4 µM) under the same conditions (Yang and
Roden, 1996
).
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Discussion |
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Effects of OPC-18790 on cadiac potassium currents.
In this
study, we have demonstrated that OPC-18790 is only a very weak blocker
of the potassium currents obtained by expression of the cardiac
potassium channel genes Kv1.4, Kv1.5 and Kv2.1. This is in contrast to
quinidine, which blocks these currents at concentrations similar to
those observed in clinical therapy. Moreover, the concentrations of
quinidine required to block IKr are also in, or indeed
below, the range that is usually associated with clinical effects in
humans (Yang and Roden, 1996
). It is, however, well recognized that
some patients develop marked QT prolongation and the polymorphic
ventricular tachycardia torsades de pointes even at
"subtherapeutic" plasma quinidine concentrations (Koster and
Wellens, 1976
; Roden et al., 1986
). As discussed below, the
low EC50 for quinidine block of IKr may be
especially relevant to this form of quinidine toxicity. OPC-18790 also
blocked IKr, at concentrations similar to those required
for quinidine block. However, it differed from the
IKr-specific blocker dofetilide, in that its use-dependent
IKr-blocking properties were more similar to those observed
with quinidine than with dofetilide. Thus, in these studies, OPC-18790
exhibited a profile of block of cardiac potassium currents different
from those of other potassium channel blockers, i.e.,
quinidine and dofetilide, whose effects we have assessed in these test
systems.
Drug block of IKr.
We have found that
IKr block by quinidine and OPC-18790 is time and
voltage dependent; these features are very similar to those we and
others have previously reported for dofetilide and other
methanesulfonanilides. Block of activating currents increased with
pulse duration, and block was enhanced at very positive potentials. These characteristics indicate that the drugs do not block channels in
the closed state. A contemporary model for IKr gating
includes at least one open and one inactivated state (Shibasaki, 1987
; Sanguinetti et al., 1995
; Trudeau et al., 1995
;
Snyders and Chaudary, 1996
), as follows:
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Implications for OPC-18790.
Meta-analysis of the effects of
phosphodiesterase inhibitors in patients with congestive heart failure
suggests that these drugs, as a class, increase the mortality rate
(Nony et al., 1994
). However, clinical trials with
vesnarinone have hinted that, at lower dosages, it might decrease the
mortality rate, possibly as a result of its action potential-prolonging
actions, because the latter can produce arrhythmia suppression.
Importantly, action potential prolongation may also exert modest
positive inotropic actions, thought to be attributable to increases in
intracellular calcium levels resulting from delayed repolarization. The
identification of mutations in HERG, the gene that appears
to encode IKr, in the congenital long-QT syndrome naturally
raises the question of whether block of IKr is likely to be
a safe antiarrhythmic strategy. In clinical trials, high dosages of
OPC-18790 have been reported to cause torsades de pointes. Clinical
trials that are currently in progress with both vesnarinone and
OPC-18790 should help further test the concept that the combination of
phosphodiesterase inhibition and action potential prolongation results
in improved outcomes for patients with heart failure, as long as
dosages that result in marked QT prolongation and torsades de pointes
can be avoided.
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Acknowledgments |
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The assistance of Holly Waldrop in maintaining the AT-1 cell system and of Patricia James in preparing the manuscript is gratefully acknowledged.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication November 27, 1996.
Received for publication August 12, 1996.
1 This work was supported in part by grants from the United States Public Health Service (HL49989, HL46681 and HL47599) and Otsuka America Pharmaceutical, Inc. D.M.R. is the holder of the William Stokes Chair in Experimental Therapeutics, a gift from the Daiichi Corporation.
Send reprint requests to: Dan M. Roden, M.D., Division of Clinical Pharmacology, 532 Medical Research Building, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232-6602.
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Abbreviations |
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IKr, rapidly activating component of cardiac delayed rectifier; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline.
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References |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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K. Kamiya, J. S. Mitcheson, K. Yasui, I. Kodama, and M. C. Sanguinetti Open Channel Block of HERG K+ Channels by Vesnarinone Mol. Pharmacol., August 1, 2001; 60(2): 244 - 253. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K. Eto, K. Hashimoto, and H. Nakaya Preferential inhibition of IKr by MCI-154, a putative cardiotonic Ca2+ sensitizer, in guinea pig atrial cells Cardiovasc Res, June 1, 1998; 38(3): 685 - 694. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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