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Correspondence to Ging Kuo Wang: wang{at}zeus.bwh.harvard.edu
Resurgent tail Na+ currents were first discovered in cerebellar Purkinje neurons. A recent study showed that a 14-mer fragment of a mouse ß4 subunit, ß4154167, acts as an intracellular open-channel blocker and elicits resurgent currents in Purkinje neurons (Grieco, T.M., J.D. Malhotra, C. Chen, L.L. Isom, and I.M. Raman. 2005. Neuron. 45:233244). To explore these phenotypes in vitro, we characterized ß4154167 actions in inactivation-deficient cardiac hNav1.5 Na+ channels expressed in human embryonic kidney 293t cells. Intracellular ß4154167 from 25250 µM elicited a conspicuous time-dependent block of inactivation-deficient Na+ currents at 50 mV in a concentration-dependent manner. On and off rates for ß4154167 binding were estimated at 10.1 µM1s1 and 49.1 s1, respectively. Upon repolarization, large tail currents emerged with a slight delay at 140 mV, probably as a result of the rapid unblocking of ß4154167. Near the activation threshold (approximately 70 mV), resurgent tail currents were robust and long lasting. Likewise, ß4154167 induces resurgent currents in wild-type hNav1.5 Na+ channels, although to a lesser extent. The inactivation peptide acetyl-KIFMK-amide not only restored the fast inactivation phenotype in hNav1.5 inactivation-deficient Na+ channels but also elicited robust resurgent currents. When modified by batrachotoxin (BTX), wild-type hNav1.5 Na+ channels opened persistently but became resistant to ß4154167 and acetyl-KIFMK-amide block. Finally, a lysine substitution of a phenylalanine residue at D4S6, F1760, which forms a part of receptors for local anesthetics and BTX, rendered cardiac Na+ channels resistant to ß4154167. Together, our in vitro studies identify a putative S6-binding site for ß4154167 within the inner cavity of hNav1.5 Na+ channels. Such an S6 receptor readily explains (1) why ß4154167 gains access to its receptor as an open-channel blocker, (2), why bound ß4154167 briefly prevents the activation gate from closing by a "foot-in-the-door" mechanism during deactivation, (3) why BTX inhibits ß4154167 binding by physical exclusion, and (4) why a lysine substitution of residue F1760 eliminates ß4154167 binding.
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