Abstract

Although the sodium channel blocker, mexiletine, is the first choice drug in myotonia, some myotonic patients remain unsatisfied due to contraindications, lack of tolerability, or incomplete response. More therapeutic options are thus needed for myotonic patients, which require clinical trials based on solid preclinical data. In previous structure-activity relationship studies, we identified two newly-synthesized derivatives of tocainide, To040 and To042, with greatly enhanced potency and use-dependent behavior in inhibiting sodium currents in frog skeletal muscle fibers. The current study was performed to verify their potential as antimyotonic agents. Patch-clamp experiments show that both compounds, especially To042, are greatly more potent and use-dependent blockers of human skeletal muscle hNav1.4 channels compared to tocainide and mexiletine. Reduced effects on F1586C hNav1.4 mutant suggest that the compounds bind to the local anesthetic receptor, but that the increased hindrance and lipophilia of the N-substituent may further strengthen drug-receptor interaction and use-dependence. Compared to mexiletine, To042 was 120 times more potent to block hNav1.4 channels in a myotonia-like cellular condition and 100 times more potent to improve muscle stiffness in vivo in a previously-validated rat model of myotonia. To explore toxicological profile, To042 was tested on hERG potassium currents, motor coordination using rotarod, and C2C12 cell line for cytotoxicity. All these experiments suggest a satisfactory therapeutic index for To042. This study shows that, owing to a huge use-dependent block of sodium channels, To042 is a promising candidate drug for myotonia and possibly other membrane excitability disorders, warranting further preclinical and human studies.

Highlights

  • Blockers of voltage-gated sodium channels are clinically used in a number of disorders of plasma membrane excitability, including cardiac arrhythmias, epileptic seizures, pain, and myotonia (Imbrici et al, 2016)

  • We found that the antimyotonic activity of drugs in vivo was closely parallel to the in vitro inhibition of sodium currents elicited by high-frequency voltageclamp protocols in mammalian cells transfected with hNav1.4 cDNA

  • Tocainide derivatives were tested on hNav1.4 channels permanently expressed in HEK293 cells using whole-cell patch-clamp

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Summary

Introduction

Blockers of voltage-gated sodium channels are clinically used in a number of disorders of plasma membrane excitability, including cardiac arrhythmias, epileptic seizures, pain, and myotonia (Imbrici et al, 2016). Anesthetics receptor located within the pore of the channel (Ragsdale et al, 1994, 1996). This receptor is highly conserved among sodium channel subtypes, thereby allowing most blockers to exert similar block of sodium channels expressed in central and peripheral neurons, cardiomyocytes and skeletal muscle fibers (England and de Groot, 2009). The safety of these drugs relies on their ability to block sodium channels in a frequency-dependent manner, allowing a selective inhibition of over-excited cells while sparing the healthy organs.

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