Abstract

In terms of the "guarded receptor" hypothesis, changes in potency of Na+ channel blocking drugs reflect alterations in drug access to and/or egress from a compartment facing a binding site with constant affinity. Potency is therefore assumed to be determined by changes in drug diffusion, its mobility in the electric field, protonation etc. Hence, the potencies of enantiomers, i.e. compounds with identical physicochemical properties, should be influenced in a parallel manner by the condition. To test this prediction, actions of the enantiomers of the stereoselective antiarrhythmic drug asocainol were compared at various membrane potentials and stimulus frequencies. Several experimental models indicative of Na+ channel block were used: the elevation of the rectangular pulse stimulation threshold (RPT) and the suppression of alternating-current induced arrhythmia (ACT) were studied in guinea-pig atria. The reduction of the upstroke velocity of action potentials was measured in guinea-pig papillary muscles. The inhibition of whole-cell Na+ currents was investigated in isolated guinea-pig ventricular myocytes. In all these assays, (+)-asocainol was more potent than the (-)-enantiomer. Lowering the membrane potential and/or increasing the stimulus frequency enhanced the effects of both enantiomers. However, over a certain range of conditions, the potency of (+)-asocainol was more markedly affected than that of (-)-asocainol, indicating that the eudismic ratio between potencies of the two drugs is not constant. Accordingly, these findings are inconsistent with the guarded receptor hypothesis.

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