Literature DB >> 14534149

Inhibition of cardiac sodium currents by toluene exposure.

Silvia L Cruz1, Gerardo Orta-Salazar, Marcia Y Gauthereau, Lourdes Millan-Perez Peña, Eduardo M Salinas-Stefanón.   

Abstract

Toluene is an industrial solvent widely used as a drug of abuse, which can produce sudden sniffing death due to cardiac arrhythmias. In this paper, we tested the hypothesis that toluene inhibits cardiac sodium channels in Xenopus laevis oocytes transfected with Nav1.5 cDNA and in isolated rat ventricular myocytes. In oocytes, toluene inhibited sodium currents (INa+) in a concentration-dependent manner, with an IC50 of 274 microm (confidence limits: 141-407 microm). The inhibition was complete, voltage-independent, and slowly reversible. Toluene had no effect on: (i). the shape of the I-V curves; (ii). the reversal potential of Na+; and (iii). the steady-state inactivation. The slow recovery time constant from inactivation of INa+ decreased with toluene exposure, while the fast recovery time constant remained unchanged. Block of INa+ by toluene was use- and frequency-dependent. In rat cardiac myocytes, 300 microm toluene inhibited the sodium current (INa+) by 62%; this inhibition was voltage independent. These results suggest that toluene binds to cardiac Na+ channels in the open state and unbinds either when channels move between inactivated states or from an inactivated to a closed state. The use- and frequency-dependent block of INa+ by toluene might be responsible, at least in part, for its arrhythmogenic effect.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14534149      PMCID: PMC1574070          DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0705481

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Pharmacol        ISSN: 0007-1188            Impact factor:   8.739


  39 in total

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9.  Electrocardiographic changes and exposure to solvents.

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