Abstract

2,3-Benzodiazepine derivatives are AMPA receptor inhibitors, and they are potential drugs for treating some neurological diseases caused by excessive activity of AMPA receptors. Using a laser-pulse photolysis and rapid solution flow techniques, we characterized the mechanism of action of a 2,3-benzodiazepine derivative, termed BDZ-f, by measuring its inhibitory effect on the channel-opening and channel-closing rate constants as well as the whole-cell current amplitude of the homomeric GluA2Q AMPA receptor channels. We also investigated whether BDZ-f competes with GYKI 52466 for binding to the same site on GluA2Q(flip). GYKI 52466 is the prototypic 2,3-benzodiazepine compound, and BDZ-f is the N-3 methylcarbamoyl derivative. We found that BDZ-f is a noncompetitive inhibitor with a slight preference for the closed-channel state of both the flip and the flop variants of GluA2Q. Similar to other 2,3-benzodiazepine compounds that we have previously characterized, BDZ-f inhibits GluA2Q(flip) by forming an initial, loose intermediate that is partially conducting; however, this intermediate rapidly isomerizes into a tighter, fully inhibitory receptor-inhibitor complex. BDZ-f binds to the same noncompetitive site as GYKI 52466 does. Together, our results show that the addition of an N-3 methylcarbamoyl group to the diazepine ring with the azomethine feature (i.e., GYKI 52466) is what makes BDZ-f more potent and more selective toward the closed-channel conformation than the original GYKI 52466. Our results have useful implications for the structure-activity relationship of the 2,3-benzodiazepine series.

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