Abstract

The kinetics of the inhibition by dihydroouabain (DHO) of the Na pump current were studied in isolated rabbit cardiac Purkinje cells by means of whole-cell recording. A fast exchange of the extracellular solution at the membrane of the cell studied was performed via two multi-barrelled pipettes nearby. Judging from the steady-state inhibition of the Na pump current at various DHO concentrations half maximal inhibition occurred at 1 x 10(-5) mol/l DHO in a medium containing 2 mmol/l K+ and at 3.5 x 10(-5) mol/l DHO in a solution containing 10.8 mmol/l K+. Assuming a reversible one-to-one binding reaction, the time course of DHO binding and unbinding was analysed under a variety of conditions. It was shown that the antagonistic effect of K+ on the inhibition of the pump current was entirely due to a decrease of the association rate constant of DHO binding to the sodium pump at higher K+ concentrations. The association rate constant amounted to 1 x 10(4) (mol/l)-1.s-1 at 2 mmol/l K+ and to 2.8 x 10(3) (mol/l)-1.s-1 at 10.8 mmol/l K+. The dissociation rate constant of DHO unbinding remained unchanged (approximately 0.06 s-1). The equilibrium dissociation constant KD for the inhibition of the pump current by DHO decreased by a factor 3 to 5 if the Na+ concentration of the patch pipette solution was augmented from 5 to 50 mmol/l. Increasing DHO concentrations inhibited the pump current increasingly faster and to a larger extent. The KD values derived showed little variation with the concentration of DHO applied.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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