Abstract

Lidocaine bears in its structure both an aromatic ring and a terminal amine, which can be protonated at physiological pH, linked by an amide group. Since lidocaine causes multiple inhibitory actions on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs), this work was aimed to determine the inhibitory effects of diethylamine (DEA), a small molecule resembling the hydrophilic moiety of lidocaine, on Torpedo marmorata nAChRs microtransplanted to Xenopus oocytes. Similarly to lidocaine, DEA reversibly blocked acetylcholine-elicited currents (IACh) in a dose-dependent manner (IC50 close to 70 μM), but unlike lidocaine, DEA did not affect IACh desensitization. IACh inhibition by DEA was more pronounced at negative potentials, suggesting an open-channel blockade of nAChRs, although roughly 30% inhibition persisted at positive potentials, indicating additional binding sites outside the pore. DEA block of nAChRs in the resting state (closed channel) was confirmed by the enhanced IACh inhibition when pre-applying DEA before its co-application with ACh, as compared with solely DEA and ACh co-application. Virtual docking assays provide a plausible explanation to the experimental observations in terms of the involvement of different sets of drug binding sites. So, at the nAChR transmembrane (TM) domain, DEA and lidocaine shared binding sites within the channel pore, giving support to their open-channel blockade; besides, lidocaine, but not DEA, interacted with residues at cavities among the M1, M2, M3, and M4 segments of each subunit and also at intersubunit crevices. At the extracellular (EC) domain, DEA and lidocaine binding sites were broadly distributed, which aids to explain the closed channel blockade observed. Interestingly, some DEA clusters were located at the α-γ interphase of the EC domain, in a cavity near the orthosteric binding site pocket; by contrast, lidocaine contacted with all α-subunit loops conforming the ACh binding site, both in α-γ and α-δ and interphases, likely because of its larger size. Together, these results indicate that DEA mimics some, but not all, inhibitory actions of lidocaine on nAChRs and that even this small polar molecule acts by different mechanisms on this receptor. The presented results contribute to a better understanding of the structural determinants of nAChR modulation.

Highlights

  • Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors belong to the “Cysloop” superfamily of ligand-gated ion channels (LGICs)

  • The half inhibitory DEA concentration (IC50) was 68 μM, similar to that found for lidocaine (73 μM, range 62–83 μM; AlberolaDie et al, 2011), and the Hill coefficient was 1.15 ± 0.04, suggesting that a single DEA molecule caused lidocaine-like nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) blockade

  • Lidocaine is an aminoethylamide local anesthetic that in physiological solutions exists as a mixture of charged and uncharged species, due to its pKa of 7.8 (Liu et al, 2003)

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Summary

Introduction

Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) belong to the “Cysloop” superfamily of ligand-gated ion channels (LGICs). All members of this family of receptors are constituted by five subunits, each one contributing four transmembrane spanningsegments (M1–M4), which conform a channel pore lined by the M2 segment of each subunit (Albuquerque et al, 2009; Hurst et al, 2013). Lidocaine modulates the function of other voltage-dependent channels, including Ca2+ (Xiong and Strichartz, 1998) and K+ channels (Trellakis et al, 2006) and different pentameric LGICs, such as 5-hydroxytryptamine-3 (Ueta et al, 2007), glycine (Gly) and GABAA receptors (Hara and Sata, 2007), nAChRs (Steinbach, 1968; Gentry and Lukas, 2001; Alberola-Die et al, 2011, 2013) and the prokaryotic channels GLIC and ELIC (Hilf et al, 2010; Gonzalez-Gutierrez and Grosman, 2015). The specific mechanisms of action of lidocaine on neuroreceptors are not fully understood

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