| Literature DB >> 20411124 |
Abstract
The human genome encodes nine functional voltage-gated Na+ channels. Three of them, namely Na(v)1.5, Na(v)1.8, and Na(v)1.9, are resistant to nanomolar concentrations of tetrodotoxin (TTX; IC(50) > or = 1 microM). The other isoforms, which are predominantly expressed in the skeletal muscle and nervous system, are highly sensitive to TTX (IC(50) approximately 10 nM). During the last two decades, it has become evident that in addition to the major cardiac isoform Na(v)1.5, several of those TTX sensitive isoforms are expressed in the mammalian heart. Whereas immunohistochemical and electrophysiological methods demonstrated functional expression in various heart regions, the physiological importance of those isoforms for cardiac excitation in higher mammals is still debated. This review summarizes our knowledge on the systemic cardiovascular effects of TTX in animals and humans, with a special focus on cardiac excitation and performance at lower concentrations of this marine drug. Altogether, these data strongly suggest that TTX sensitive Na+ channels, detected more recently in various heart tissues, are not involved in excitation phenomena in the healthy adult heart of higher mammals.Entities:
Keywords: Na+ channel; TTX poisoning; TTX sensitivity; cardiac conduction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20411124 PMCID: PMC2857368 DOI: 10.3390/md8030741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Suggested functions of TTXs Na+ channels in the mammalian myocardium. A detailed overview on tissue distribution and detection methods for the individual TTXs Na+ channels was given by Haufe et al. [9].
| Study | Results and suggested function of TTXs Na+ channels | Species |
|---|---|---|
| [ | Nav1.1 transcripts and TTXs currents (IC50 ~ 26 nM) in newborn (but not adult) sinus node cells, suggesting that, depending on age, TTXs Na+ channels contribute to slow diastolic depolarization. | Rabbit |
| [ | Reduction in spontaneous heart rate by blocking Nav1.1/Nav1.3 at 100 nM TTX; important contribution of TTXs Na+ channels to sinus node automaticity and rhythm, suggesting a possible contribution to SSS in man. | Mouse |
| [ | Slowing of pacemaking in intact sinus node preparations and isolated cells at 10 and 100 nM TTX, slowing of both pacemaking and sinus node conduction at 1–30 μM TTX. | Mouse |
| [ | Reduction of left ventricular function at 100 and 200 nM TTX, suggesting an unexpected role of brain-type Na+ channels in excitation-contraction coupling. | Mouse, guinea pig |
| [ | Localization of brain-type Na+ channels and two | Mouse |
| [ | Shortening of AP duration, but not of the maximum rate of rise, at low TTX (≥33 nM). | Dog |
| [ | Higher transcript levels and TTXs currents in Purkinje fibers (35 and 22%), when compared to ventricular myocytes (<20 and 10%, respectively). | Dog |
| [ | Expression of Nav1.4 in cardiac Purkinje myocytes (PCR, immunofluorescence). | Dog |
| [ | Detection of Nav1.1 transcripts in the heart. | Rat |
| [ | Cardiac Na+ channels are composed of either Nav1.1 or Nav1.5, and both associate with | Mouse, rat |
| [ | Up-regulation of Nav1.1 and increased TTXs Na+ current in the postinfarction remodeled myocardium. | Rat |
| [ | Large transcript pool in whole hearts (30–40%), smaller TTXs Na+ currents in ventricular myocytes (8%) of mice (not observed in pigs and humans). | Mouse |
| [ | Middle region of ventricular myocytes contains only TTXs Na+ channels, that can be blocked by 50 nM TTX. | Rabbit |
| [ | Prolongation of the cycle length of the spontaneous pacemaker activity at 100 nM TTX by 22% and 53% in sinoatrial and atrioventricular node preparations, respectively. | Mouse |
In vivo effect of TTX on the cardiovascular system of various mammalian species. Only studies with a strong focus on the cardiovascular system were included. The minimal lethal dosages (MLD), applied i.p. or i.v., were 2.7–10 μg/kg for rats [41,43], 4.5 μg/kg for guinea pigs [41], 8–10 μg/kg for mice, rabbits, dogs, and cats [35,36,41,49]. Neuromuscular function was already severely affected at sub-lethal dosages. Given orally, the MLD in cats, but not in humans (see Section 4), was at least 20-times higher [35].
| Study | Species | TTX app-lication | TTX dose | Cardiovascular effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | dog, cat, rabbit, rat | s.c. | Tetrodon hard roe extracts | mild intoxication: ataxia and paresis at normal heart function and blood pressure |
| [ | rabbit | i.v. | ≥0.7 MLD | hypotension, SA and AV block, but no direct chronotropic or inotropic effects |
| [ | dog | into sinus node artery | up to 310 nM | unchanged heart rate |
| [ | dog | i.v. | 5 μg/kg | bradycardia of sinoatrial origin, decrease in conduction, hypotension |
| [ | cat | i.p. | 1 μg/kg daily | no pathological change |
| [ | dog | i.v. | 5 μg/kg | no significant ECG abnormalities, reduced contractile force, hypotension |
| [ | rat | i.v. | 5 μg/kg | sharp fall of blood pressure at initially unchanged heart rate and stroke volume |
| [ | rat | i.v. | 2.5 μg/kg | unchanged blood flow in the ascending aorta, hypotension and bradycardia at otherwise unchanged ECG |
| [ | pithed rat | i.v. | 10–20 μg/kg | reduction of blood flow in the ascending aorta, hypotension, transient mild bradycardia, transient first degree AV block, bundle brunch block |
| [ | rat | isolated heart | 1.0 to 4.0 μg (3 μM solution) | dissociation/cessation of ventricular contractions depending on dose |
| [ | cat | i.v. | 1 μg/kg | unchanged heart rate, hypotension |
| [ | cat | i.v. | 1 μg/kg | unchanged heart rate, hypotension due to a direct relaxing effect on vascular smooth muscles |
| [ | cat | i.v. | 1.4–3 μg/kg | prompt fall of blood pressure at unchanged heart rate and pulse pressure; initially no striking ECG alterations, increased amplitude of QRS and T wave after the development of hypotension |
| [ | guinea pig | i.p. | 15 μg/kg | response before respiratory arrest (≤10.3 min from injection time point): decline in blood pressure, but no change in heart rate and ECG waveform |
| [ | rat | i.a. | 20 μg/kg | rapid and severe hypotension, bradycardia, heart rate increased shortly after artificial respiration was commenced |
| [ | dog | i.v. (slowly) | 9.3 μg/kg/hr | at apnoe: bradycardia at unchanged stroke volume, hypotension, decreased total peripheral resistance, increased pulmonary vascular resistance and increased pulmonary arterial pressure; at higher TTX concentrations (12–20 μg/kg/hr), dogs died before or shortly after apnoe, which was due to fatal hypotension |
Clinical grading system in tetrodotoxication according to [68].
| Degree | Symptoms |
|---|---|
| First | Oral numbness and paraesthesia, sometimes accompanied by gastrointestinal symptoms (nausea |
| Second | Numbness of face and other areas, advanced paraesthesia, motor paralysis of extremities, incoordination, slurred speech, but still normal reflexes |
| Third | Gross muscular incoordination, aphonia, dysphagia, dyspnoea, cyanosis, drop in blood pressure, fixed/dilated pupils, precordial pain, but victims are still conscious |
| Fourth | Severe respiratory failure and hypoxia, severe hypotension, bradycardia, cardiac arrhythmia, heart continues to pulsate for a short period |
TTX is considered as the most potent emetic agent, directly acting on the medullary chemoreceptor trigger zone [41,70].
Figure 1TTX concentrations in blood or serum samples of intoxicated patients. The degree of intoxication was either reported by the authors or assessed according to documented symptoms (for individual data points see Table 4 and the respective references). The lowest and highest concentration reported in [62] was assigned to the first and fourth stage, respectively. Patients 4, 2, 3, and 1, previously reported in [76,81] were assigned to the first, second, third, and fourth stage, respectively. A value of 80 nM was assumed for a severely intoxicated patient whose serum and blood levels were about 83 and 77 nM, respectively [65,66].
Summary on case reports between 1983 and 2009 on TTX-poisoned patients.
| Study | Cases | Grade | TTX (nM) | Hypotension | Sinus bradycardia | ECG | Artificial respiration | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 3 | 1–2 | no | no | no | oxygen saturation 96–99% | ||
| [ | 4 | 1–2 | 4.5–21.1 | no or mild | no | normal | no | mild hypercapnia |
| [ | 16 | 1–2 | no | eight patients had hypertension | ||||
| [ | 3 | 1–2 | no | no | ||||
| [ | 177 | 1–3 | no | no | all recovered completely | |||
| [ | 6 | 1–3 | no | |||||
| [ | 1 | 2–3 | yes | yes | normal | no | hypoxemia, diabetes mellitus | |
| [ | 1 | 2–3 | no | no | no | normal arterial pO2 | ||
| [ | 4 | 2–3 | no | intermittent | normal | no | normal blood pressure, no hypoxia | |
| [ | 11 | 2–3 | <5–5 (grade 2) | no | no | yes (grade 3) | no cardiovascular effects, no fatalities | |
| [ | 1 | 3 | no | yes | normal | yes | reduced sensory and motor conduction velocities, decrease in evoked amplitudes | |
| [ | 1 | 3 | no | no | normal | yes | decreased arterial pO2 | |
| [ | 1 | 3 | 28.6 | yes | no | normal | yes | |
| [ | 1 | 3–4 | hypertension | no | Yes (cyanosis) | diabetes mellitus | ||
| [ | 1 | 4 | yes | stable cardiovascular status after cardiopulmonary resuscitation; TTX-induced cranial diabetes insipidus | ||||
| [ | 1 | 4 | 77/83 | no | no | normal | yes | non-excitability of sensory and motor nerves |
| [ | 1 | 4 | yes | no | yes | cardiac arrest before admission to the ED, resuscitation to sinus rhythm, patient died | ||
| [ | 1 | 4 | 40.6 | yes | yes | AV block | yes | diabetes mellitus |
| [ | 1 | 4 | 114 | yes | yes | normal | yes | hypothermia, blood gases were unremarkable |
| [ | 1 | 4 | 164 | yes | yes | complete block of motor nerve conduction | ||
| [ | 68 | 4 | Yes (14/68) | Yes (all) | five fatalities, one patient with brain damage | |||
| [ | 83 | 1–4 | 5–43 | seven fatal cases (respiratory arrest) | ||||
| [ | 37 | 1–4 | eight fatalities | |||||
| [ | 53 | 1–4 | eight fatalities | |||||
| [ | 40 | 1–4 | no fatalities |
Reported TTX concentrations in serum or blood samples.
mild ST elevation.
pre-existing disease.
Cardiac dysautonomia did not correlate to TTX levels in blood [86].
TTX concentrations were determined in blood or urine from 38 patients [62].