Abstract

The effects of veratridine, an alkaloid found in Liliaceae plants, on tetrodotoxin (TTX)-sensitive voltage-gated Na(+) channels were investigated in mouse vas deferens. Effects of veratridine on TTX-sensitive Na(+) currents (I(Na)) in vas deferens myocytes dispersed from BALB/c mice, homozygous mice with a null allele of Na(V)1.6 (Na(V)1.6(-/-)) and wild-type mice (Na(V)1.6(+/+)) were studied using patch-clamp techniques. Tension measurements were also performed to compare the effects of veratridine on phasic contractions in intact tissues. In whole-cell configuration, veratridine had a concentration-dependent dual action on the peak amplitude of I(Na): I(Na) was enhanced by veratridine (1-10 microM), while higher concentrations (> or =30 microM) inhibited I(Na). Additionally, two membrane current components were evoked by veratridine, namely a sustained inward current during the duration of the depolarizing rectangular pulse and a tail current at the repolarization. Although veratridine caused little shift of the voltage dependence of the steady-state inactivation curve and the activation curve for I(Na), veratridine enhanced a non-inactivating component of I(Na). Veratridine caused no detectable contractions in vas deferens from Na(V)1.6(-/-) mice, although in tissues from Na(V)1.6(+/+) mice, veratridine (> or =3 microM) induced TTX-sensitive contractions. Similarly, no detectable inward currents were evoked by veratridine in Na(V)1.6(-/-) vas deferens myocytes, while veratridine elicited both the sustained and tail currents in cells taken from Na(V)1.6(+/+) mice. These results suggest that veratridine possesses a dual action on I(Na) and that the veratridine-induced activation of contraction is induced by the activation of Na(V)1.6 channels.

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