Generic placeholder image

Current Pharmaceutical Design

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1381-6128
ISSN (Online): 1873-4286

Na+ Channel Pharmacology and Molecular Mechanisms of Gating

Author(s): K. Yamaoka, S. M. Vogel and I. Seyama

Volume 12, Issue 4, 2006

Page: [429 - 442] Pages: 14

DOI: 10.2174/138161206775474468

Price: $65

Abstract

Electrogenesis of efficiently propagated action potentials requires synchronized opening of transmembrane Na+ channels possessing a sodium selectivity-filter, a high-throughput ion-conductance pathway, and voltage-dependent gating functions. These properties of the Na+ channel have long been the target of molecular analysis. Several toxins and drugs, known to selectively bind to Na + channels, have been used as pharmacological tools to investigate Na+ channel properties either electrophysiologically or chemically. Recent analyses of the protein crystal structure of bacterial voltage-dependent K+ channels have provided important clues to the identity of mobile structures involved in channel gating. The new information may be applicable to Na+ channels, and may well require a total revision of our understanding of gating mechanisms of sodium channels. Several experiments challenge the emerging view that channel gating by S6 transmembrane segments is triggered by signals from voltage sensors floating in membrane lipid. Herein, we review the various toxin and drug molecules that affect the gating behavior of Na+ channels in this new structural framework, by characterizing the binding sites of these toxins, and assessing the pharmacological effects resulting from changes in the structure of the toxin or sodium channel.

Keywords: inactivation gate, Membrane depolarization, Tetrodotoxin, Methanethiosulfonate, Myocytes


Rights & Permissions Print Cite
© 2024 Bentham Science Publishers | Privacy Policy