| Literature DB >> 22947121 |
Sebastian Polak1, Barbara Wiśniowska, Anna Glinka, Miłosz Polak.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Drugs safety issues are now recognized as being factors generating the most reasons for drug withdrawals at various levels of development and at the post-approval stage. Among them cardiotoxicity remains the main reason, despite the substantial effort put into in vitro and in vivo testing, with the main focus put on hERG channel inhibition as the hypothesized surrogate of drug proarrhythmic potency. The large interest in the IKr current has resulted in the development of predictive tools and informative databases describing a drug's susceptibility to interactions with the hERG channel, although there are no similar, publicly available sets of data describing other ionic currents driven by the human cardiomyocyte ionic channels, which are recognized as an overlooked drug safety target. DISCUSSION: The aim of this database development and publication was to provide a scientifically useful, easily usable and clearly verifiable set of information describing not only IKr (hERG), but also other human cardiomyocyte specific ionic channels inhibition data (IKs, INa, ICa).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22947121 PMCID: PMC3506270 DOI: 10.1186/2050-6511-13-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pharmacol Toxicol ISSN: 2050-6511 Impact factor: 2.483
Characterization of the four ionic currents present in the Tox-Database.net
| Na+ | Voltage-gated | INa | 0 | Nav1.5 | SCN5A | alfa | H558R, S216L, del AL 586-587, R680H, R1193Q, T1304M, F1486L, V1951L, F2004L P2006A, S1103Y, R190G, A572D | - Long QT syndrome type 3 | [ |
| - Sudden cardiac death | |||||||||
| - Risk Factor for Atrial Fibrillation | |||||||||
| - Brugada syndrome | |||||||||
| - Idiopathic ventricular fibrillation | |||||||||
| - Heart rhythm disorders | |||||||||
| - Romano-Ward syndrome | |||||||||
| - SIDS (Sudden infant death syndrome) | |||||||||
| Ca 2+ | Voltage-gated | ICaL (L-type calcium current) | 2 | CaV1.2 | CACNA1C | alfa 1 C | G406R, G402S | - Timothy syndrome | [ |
| K+ | Voltage-gated | IKr (rapid delayed rectifier potassium current) | 3 | Kv11.1 | KCNH2 (hERG) | alfa | P347S, R1047L, A1116V, K897T, P967L, Q1068R, R181Q, G187S, GAG187-189del, A190T, A203T, N257H, T367S, G873S, P910L, R1035W, A1058E, N33T, R176W, V215G, H254Q, C723R, P917L, L1023del, A915V, P251A, G965R, R1055Q, L1108V, G1154S, T875M, R273Q, V279M, R885C, S1040G, G294V, A190T, N588K | - Long QT syndrome type 2 | [ |
| - Romano-Ward syndrome | |||||||||
| - SIDS | |||||||||
| - Short QT syndrome | |||||||||
| | | | | MiRP1 | KCNE2 | beta | Q9E, A66V, T8A, R27C | - Long QT syndrome type 6 | [ |
| - Familial atrial fibrillation | |||||||||
| - Romano-Ward syndrome | |||||||||
| - SIDS | |||||||||
| | | IKs | 3 | KvLQT1 (Kv7.1) | KCNQ1 | alfa | IAP54-56dup, V129I, V207M, G297S, F335L, P408A, P448R, R451Q, G621S, G643S, V648I, V110I, K393N, D428G, R519H, P441S, G119D, I274V, G460S, V307L, T600M, V648I | - Long QT syndrome type 1 | [ |
| - Atrial fibrillation | | ||||||||
| - Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome | |||||||||
| - SIDS | | ||||||||
| | | | | MinK | KCNE1 | beta | G38S, G52A, K69R, D85N, V109I, V14I | - Long QT syndrome type 5 | [ |
| | | | | | | | | - Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome | |
| - Romano-Ward syndrome |
Description of information collected for all ionic currents
| channel type | + | - | + | + | For the cell lines heterologously expressing channel subunits: name of the gene encoding expressed subunits or name of expressed channel and its origin (r-rat; h-human) |
| in vitro cell model | + | + | + | + | Cell line used for channel subunits expression or cardiomyocytes origin (e.g. HEK, XO, guinea pig VM) |
| stimulation frequency [Hz] | + | - | - | + | Number of current provoking pulses delivered every second expressed in Hz |
| transfection type | + | + | + | + | Mode of channel expression in heterologous system (stable or transient) |
| temperature [0C] | + | + | + | + | Temperature maintained during experiment |
| technique | + | + | + | + | Technique used for current recordings |
| Ca2+ bath [mM] | + | - | - | - | Calcium ion concentration in the bath solution |
| K+ bath [mM] | - | + | + | - | Potassium ion concentration in the bath solution |
| Na+ bath [mM] | - | - | - | + | Sodium ion concentration in the bath solution |
| t1 pulse [ms] | + | + | + | + | Duration of first pulse in the step-protocol |
| t2 pulse [ms] | + | + | + | + | Duration of second pulse in the step-protocol |
| holding potential [mV] | + | + | + | + | The starting membrane voltage level |
| depolarization potential [mV] | + | + | + | + | Voltage of membrane depolarizing impulse |
| repolarization potential [mV] | + | + | + | + | Voltage of membrane repolarizing impulse |
| measurement potential [mV] | + | + | + | + | Membrane voltage level during current amplitude measurement |
| protocol | + | + | + | + | Type of voltage protocol applied to elicit current (e.g. step, AP, ramp) |
| data source | + | + | + | + | First author name and publication year |
| PMID | + | + | + | + | PubMed Unique Identifier, a unique number assigned to each PubMed record |
| IC50 [μM] | + | + | + | + | The concentration of compound that results in 50% inhibition of current in micromolar |
| comments | + | + | + | + | Additional information e.g. alternative naming, denotation of smiles and/or IUPAC name source if not PubChem; source of uncertainty |
Where: "+” – parameter present in the record description; "-” – parameter absent in the record description.
Figure 1Tox-Database.net management scheme.
Figure 2Tox-Database.net presentation layer structure.
Figure 3Tox-Database.net GUI – welcome screen.
Figure 4Tox-Database.net GUI – listing mode.
Figure 5Tox-Database.net GUI – search by name.
Figure 6Tox-Database.net GUI – search by smiles.