| Literature DB >> 23516517 |
Aida Oliván-Viguera1, Marta Sofía Valero, María Divina Murillo, Heike Wulff, Angel-Luis García-Otín, José-Miguel Arbonés-Mainar, Ralf Köhler.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: KCa3.1 channels are calcium/calmodulin-regulated voltage-independent K(+) channels that produce membrane hyperpolarization and shape Ca(2+)-signaling and thereby physiological functions in epithelia, blood vessels, and white and red blood cells. Up-regulation of KCa3.1 is evident in fibrotic and inflamed tissues and some tumors rendering the channel a potential drug target. In the present study, we searched for novel potent small molecule inhibitors of KCa3.1 by testing a series of 20 selected natural and synthetic (poly)phenols, synthetic benzoic acids, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), with known cytoprotective, anti-inflammatory, and/or cytostatic activities. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23516517 PMCID: PMC3597730 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0058614
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Inhibitory effects of natural and synthetic (poly)phenols, synthetic benzoic acids, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs on KCa3.1 channels.
| Compound | % of control at | |||||
| 1 µM | 10 µM | 50 µM | ||||
|
| 117±9 | 108±15 | NT | |||
|
| NT | 101±6 | NT | |||
|
| NT | 78±11 | 46±12 | |||
|
| 59±6 | 22±11 | 0.8±0.3 | |||
|
| NT | 87±8 | 32±4 | |||
|
| NT | 44±1 | 12±3 | |||
|
| NT | 94±6 | NT | |||
|
| NT | 102±6 | NT | |||
|
| NT | 108±5 | 104±7 | |||
|
| 72±6 | 53±7 | 46±3 | |||
|
| 117±4 | 136±28 | NT | |||
|
| NT | 106±7 | 81±4 | |||
|
| 65±4 | 13±5 | 2.5±0.3 | |||
|
| NT | 33±6 | NT | |||
|
| NT | 98±5 | 99±14 | |||
|
| 78±6 | NT | NT | |||
|
| 4±1 | NT | NT | |||
|
| 61±17 | NT | NT | |||
|
| 1±1 | NT | NT | |||
|
| 329±76 (activation) | NT | NT | |||
NT, not tested; data are given as mean ± SEM, n ≥3.
Figure 1Pharmacological modulation of KCa3.1 channels by natural phenols and NSID.
Original recordings of KCa3.1 whole-cell currents in 3T3 fibroblasts are shown. Currents were activated by infusion of 1 µM Ca2+ free via the patch-pipette and exhibited voltage-independence and inward-rectification typical for KCa3.1. A) On left: Complete inhibition of KCa3.1 channels by caffeic acid. On right: Weak inhibition by vanillic acid. B) On left: Complete inhibition of KCa3.1 channels by flufenamic acid. On right: The structurally similar niflumic acid had no blocking activity.
Figure 2Inhibition of KCa3.1 channels by polyphenolic trivanillic ester, 13b.
Original recordings of fibroblast KCa3.1 currents pre-activated by infusion of 1 µM Ca2+ free via the patch pipette. A) On left: Complete inhibition of KCa3.1 currents by 1 µM 13b. On right: Dose-response relationship for 13b. Fitting data points (representing means ± SEM, n = 4–9 each) gave an EC50 of 19 nM. B) Upper panel on left: Reversibility of KCa3.1 blockade with 10 nM 13b (applied 1st) by 1 µM SKA-31 (2nd). Lower panel on left: Moderate reversibility of KCa3.1 blockade with 100 nM 13b (applied 1st) by 1 µM SKA-31 (2nd). Upper panel on right: Poor reversibility of KCa3.1 blockade with 1 µM 13b (applied 1st) by 1 µM SKA-31 (2nd). Lower panel on right: Summary of data for reversibility. Data points are given as mean ± SEM (n = 4–8 each). C) Inhibition of hKCa3.1 currents by 13b in inside-out patches from hKCa3.1 overexpressing HEK293 cells. The hKCa3.1 currents were activated by excising the patch and exposure of the cytosolic face of the channel to the high K+ and 0.5 µM Ca2+ free containing bath solution. The pipette solution was contained physiological amounts of Na+ and K+. Upper panel on left: Inhibition of hKCa3.1 by 1 µM 13b. Lower panel on left: Half inhibition of KCa3.1 by 10 nM 13b (1st), full recovery after addition of 1 µM SKA-31 (2nd), and full blockade of the recovered current by 1 µM TRAM-34 (3rd). Upper panel on right: SKA-31 was not very effective at reversing the blockade caused by 1 µM 13b. Lower panel on right: Dose-response curves for the 13b blockade in inside-out patches (filled squares, n = 3–4) and recovery by 1 µM SKA-31 (filled circles, n = 3–4 each). Fitting of the data points (filled squares) gave an EC50 of 14 nM. TRAM-34 produced complete channel blockade of the recovered currents (open triangles, n = 2) while 1 µM 13c (open squares, n = 2) and 1 µM 13a (filled boxes, n = 2) had no or minor blocking effects.
Figure 3Inhibition of closely related hKCa2.3 by 13b.
In fast whole-cell experiments, cloned hKCa2.3 were activated by infusion of 1 µM Ca2+ free via the patch-pipette. A) Panel on left: 13b at 100 pM inhibited KCa2.3 currents by approx. half. Panel on right: Dose-response relationship. Fitting of data points (representing means ± SEM, n = 3–9 each) gave an EC50 of 360 pM. B) Reversibility of complete channel blockade (at 100 nM 13b) by 1 µM SKA-31. C) Inhibition of hKCa2.3 by 13b in inside-out single-channel experiments. On left: original traces of inhibition by 100 pM 13b and SKA-31-induced recovery of currents blocked by 1 nM 13b. Full inhibition of the SKA-31-induced currents by UCL1684. On right: summary of data and dose-response curve. Data are given as means ± SEM, n = 2–5 each.
Figure 4Inhibition of proliferation of 3T3 fibroblasts.
3T3-L1 fibroblasts were treated with increasing doses of the DMSO-solubilized phenolic compounds caffeic acid (A) and 13b (B) for 3 days. Experiments were repeated three times and data (absorption, ABS) were expressed as the means ± SEM of 8 replicates for each condition. Student’s T-test was used for statistical comparison of data sets at any given time point. For caffeic acid: *p<0.01 vs. control (vehicle), #p<0.001 vs. 25 µM; ¶p<0.05 for 13b at 0.5 and 2 µM vs. control.
Figure 5Inhibition of KCa channels by 13b and TRAM-34 in freshly isolated porcine coronary artery endothelial cells.
Representative whole-cell current recordings are shown. Upper panel on left: 13b-blockade of KCa currents (activated by infusion of 1 µM Ca2+ free via the patch-pipette; cells, n = 3). Upper panel on right: Blockade of KCa3.1 current by 1 µM TRAM-34 and blockade of the residual current (KCa2.3) by 13b (n = 4). Lower panel on left: Blockade of SKA-31-activated currents by 1 µM 13b (n = 1).
13b and SKA-31 modulate 5-HT-induced contractions in porcine coronary artery.
| Compound(s) | 1st stimulation | 2nd stimulation | ||||
| n | Δg |
| n | Δg |
| |
| Vehicle (Ve) | 7 | 0.4±0.1 | 7 | 0.4±0.1 | ||
| 13b 0.5 µM | 8 | 0.7±0.1 | <0.5 | 7 | 0.7±0.1 | <0.01 |
| SKA-31 1 µM | 4 | 0.4±0.1 | n.s. | 4 | 0.5±0.1 | n.s. |
| SKA-31 10 µM | 5 | 0.4±0.1 | n.s. | 5 | 0.23±0.02 | <0.5 |
| 13b 0.5 µM+SKA-31 1 µM | 4 | 0.4±0.1 | n.s. | 4 | 0.6±0.1 | n.s. |
| 13b 0.5 µM+SKA-31 10 µM | 5 | 0.16±0.02 | <0.01 | 5 | 0.22±0.03 | <0.5 |
Data are given as mean ± SEM; n.s. not significant.
13b and SKA-31 modulate U46619-induced contractions in porcine coronary artery.
| Compound(s) | n | Δg |
|
| Vehicle (Ve) | 8 | 2.2±0.2 | |
| 13b 0.5 µM | 7 | 2.8±0.2 | <0.5 |
| SKA-31 1 µM | 4 | 1.9±0.5 | n.s. |
| SKA-31 10 µM | 4 | 1.7±0.2 | n.s. |
| 13b 0.5 µM+SKA-31 1 µM | 4 | 2.3±0.4 | n.s. |
| 13b 0.5 µM+SKA-31 10 µM | 4 | 1.9±0.2 | n.s. |
Data are given as mean ± SEM; n.s. not significant.
Modulation of bradykinin-induced relaxation in porcine coronary artery by 13b and SKA-31.
| Compound(s) | 5-HT-precontraction | U46619-precontraction | ||||
| n | % relaxation |
| n | % relaxation |
| |
| Vehicle (Ve) | 6 | 31±5 | 7 | −11±2 | ||
| 13b 0.5 µM | 7 | 24±2 | n.s. | 7 | −1±1 | <0.001 |
| SKA-31 1 µM | 4 | 65±6 | <0.01 | 4 | 5±1 | <0.001 |
| SKA-31 10 µM | 5 | 47±8 | <0.05 | 5 | 10±2 | <0.001 |
| 13b 0.5 µM+SKA-31 1 µM | 3 | 38±8 | n.s. | 4 | 2±1 | <0.001 |
| 13b 0.5 µM+SKA-31 10 µM | 5 | 69±4 | <0.001 | 5 | 8±2 | <0.001 |
Data are given as mean ± SEM; n.s. not significant.