2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.taap.2020.115010
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Mechanism underlying hooked resurgent-like tail currents induced by an insecticide in human cardiac Nav1.5

Abstract: Voltage-gated sodium channels are responsible not only for the fast upstroke of the action potential, 2 but they also modify cellular excitability via persistent and resurgent currents. Insecticides act via 3 permanently opening sodium channels to immobilize the animals. Cellular recordings performed 4 decades ago revealed distinctly hooked tail currents induced by these compounds. Here, we applied 5 the classical type-II pyrethroid deltamethrin on human cardiac Nav1.5 and observed resurgent-like 6 currents at… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Resurgent Nav currents have also been induced in heterologously expressed (in HEK-293 cells) Nav1.5-encoded channels following application of the classical type II pyrethroid, deltamethrin. Similar to our model for the generation of I NaR , the deltamethrin-modified Nav1.5 channels were found to recover from inactivation prior to deactivation ( Thull et al, 2020 ). In addition, it has also been reported ( Cummins et al, 2004 ) that heterologously expressed (in HEK-293 cells) mutant Nav1.7-encoded channels have prolonged deactivation time constants at the hyperpolarized membrane potentials associated with the activation of I NaR .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 63%
“…Resurgent Nav currents have also been induced in heterologously expressed (in HEK-293 cells) Nav1.5-encoded channels following application of the classical type II pyrethroid, deltamethrin. Similar to our model for the generation of I NaR , the deltamethrin-modified Nav1.5 channels were found to recover from inactivation prior to deactivation ( Thull et al, 2020 ). In addition, it has also been reported ( Cummins et al, 2004 ) that heterologously expressed (in HEK-293 cells) mutant Nav1.7-encoded channels have prolonged deactivation time constants at the hyperpolarized membrane potentials associated with the activation of I NaR .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 63%