The bradycardic mechanism of ZD 7288 (4-(N-ethyl-N-phenylamino)-1,2-dimethyl-6-(methylamino)pyrimidinium++ + chloride) was investigated in sheep cardiac Purkinje fibres. The pacemaker i(f)-current measured with the two-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique, as well as the diastolic depolarization rate and the frequency of spontaneously active fibres were evaluated. ZD 7288 did inhibit i(f)-current. The i(f)-amplitude recorded with a 0.8s-lasting test pulse from about -50 mV to -100 mV was reduced to 50% of control at 0.85 mumol/l and to 5% of control at 10 mumol/l. The threshold potential of i(f)-activation was unaffected at a concentration of 1 mumol/l ZD 7288. The time constant of i(f)-activation at different test potentials was not changed by 1 mumol/l ZD 7288. The drug was equally effective during i(f)-activation with a 0.5 s-lasting test pulse applied at 0.05 Hz or 0.5 Hz. During long lasting (5 s) hyperpolarizing test pulses (-120 mV) the inhibition of i(f)-current was removed. In constantly stimulated Purkinje fibres (0.5 Hz) the slope of the early diastolic depolarization was decreased by ZD 7288. The half-maximal effect occurred at 0.92 mumol/l. There was strong correlation over the concentration range of 0.01 to 10 mumol/l ZD 7288 between the decrease of the slope of early diastolic depolarization and inhibition of i(f)-amplitude recorded with 0.8s-lasting test pulses to -100 mV. The correlation coefficient was r = 0.97. These results will explain the decrease in frequency of spontaneously active (about 0.6 Hz) Purkinje fibres.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The inhibition of the pacemaker current (if) in sheep cardiac Purkinje fibers by ZD 7288 [4-(N-ethyl-N-phenylamino)-1,2-dimethyl-6-(methylamino)pyrimidinium++ + chloride] is lost use-dependently. This disinhibition of if was investigated by using the two-microelectrode voltage-clamp technique. The pulse protocol consisted of a rest period (holding potential of about -50 mV, 1-10 micromol/l ZD 7288) followed by a train of test pulses (potential negative to -100 mV, stimulation frequency 0.05 Hz). At the beginning of the first test pulse there was an immediate reduction of if but inhibition was lost during continued stimulation. Activation of if is sigmoidal and the early delay in current activation was prolonged from 33 ms (no ZD 7288) to 424 ms (10 micromol/l ZD 7288). Therefore hardly any disinhibition occurred during short test pulses (0.5s). During longer test pulses (5 s, -120 mV, 10 micromol/l) disinhibition developed with a time constant of about 2 s. The inhibition of if by ZD 7288 was lost voltage-dependently. With 10 micro mol/l ZD 7288 the half-maximal disinhibition occurred at -92 mV and the slope factor of the disinhibition/voltage curve (Boltzmann relation) was 4.8 mV. The voltage-dependent disinhibition could be abolished largely by extracellular application of protease (0.5 mg/ml, 7 min). After prior disinhibition, reinhibition at the holding potential (about -50 mV) followed a bi-exponential time course indicating that inhibition may be produced by a fast (tau=0.7 min) and a slow component (tau=20-30 min). Increasing ZD 7288 concentration from 1 to 10 mu mol/l accelerated reinhibition, mainly by an increase of the amplitude (A) of the fast component. The ratio Afast/Aslow was 0.399 at 1 micromol/l and 2.65 at 10 micromol/l ZD 7288. The reinhibition of if was unchanged by shifting the holding potential from -50 mV to -20 mV. Trials to wash out the effects of 10 micromol/l ZD 7288 gave two results. The inhibition of if was slightly reversed after a wash-out of 1.5 h with drug-free solution. A second effect of the drug, the fast reinhibition, could be completely removed by wash-out. In summary if is inhibited by ZD 7288 at membrane potentials at which the virtual if gate is closed. Disinhibition occurs during long-lasting hyperpolarization but will hardly be operative in unclamped fibres under physiological conditions.
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