Abstract
The actions of the optical enantiomers of Sandoz 202 791 were studied in barium inward currents recorded from single cultured neonatal rat ventricular heart cells, using the whole-cell configuration of the patch clamp technique. The enantiomers were applied by bath perfusion or rapidly by the technique of concentration jumps during single voltage clamp steps. (1) (-)-202 791 reduced the barium current in response to depolarizations positive to 0 mV. The peak current amplitude in the threshold range (-40 to 0 mV) was either not affected or slightly increased by the substance. (2) The agonist enantiomer (+)-202 791 increased the inward current over the whole voltage range, where the increase in peak inward current amplitude was most prominent in the voltage range from -40 mV to 0 mV. (3) The antagonist enantiomer (10-6 M) induced a 18.2±2.1 mV (n=6) shift of the midpoint of the steady state inactivation curve in the hyperpolarizing direction; in contrast (+)-202 791 at the same concentration did cause only a small but not significant shift of the Ca-channel availability curve (n=5). (4) Rapid extracellular application of (-)-202 791 (10-6 M), during the sustained current component at a test potential of 0 mV was followed by a sudden acceleration in barium current decay. The drug-induced barium current block developed with a mean time constant of 214.7±20.6 ms (n=5). (5) (+)-202 791 (10-6 M) rapidly applied during test pulses to 0 and -20 mV caused an increase in barium current with a monoor biexponential time course. The estimated mean time constant of the drug activated Ba2+ current at 0 mV membrane potential was 617.3±49.3 ms (n=4). (6) The interaction of Sandoz 202 791 with the Ca-channels is discussed in terms of a "nonmodulated receptor" model.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 690-700 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | Pflugers Archiv European Journal of Physiology |
Volume | 414 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Sep 1989 |
Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- 1,4-dihydropyridine action
- Calcium channel state transitions
- Nonmodulated receptor model
- Single neonatal ventricular heart cells
- Whole-cell patch clamp analysis