| Literature DB >> 30787875 |
Taiyi Wang1, Weiwei Xie2, Jiahui Yu2, Clive Ellory1, Robert Wilkins1, Yan Zhu2, Yu-Ling Ma1.
Abstract
Xin Su Ning (XSN) is a China patented and certified herbal medicine used to treat premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) since 2005. A recent completed clinical trial of 861 patients showed that XSN had similar PVC inhibition rate to the class I antiarrhythmic drug mexiletine, at 65.85% for XSN and 63.10% for mexiletine. We have previously reported that XSN prolongs action potential duration (APD) and suppresses action potential amplitude (APA) of the cardiac ventricular myocytes. In this report we aim to reveal the effect of XSN on the ionic channels that govern APD and APA, which would help to explain the cellular electrophysiological mechanism of XSN. Our main findings are: (1) On ECG recorded in isolated rat, in the presence of XSN the amplitude of R wave was significantly decreased and the amplitude of T wave was increased significantly; (2) XSN blocked hNaV1.5 channel stably transfected cell line in a dose-dependent manner with an IC50 of 0.18 ± 0.02 g/L; and (3) XSN suppresses hERG channels in a dose-dependent manner with an IC50 of 0.34 ± 0.01 g/L. In conclusion, the clinical antiarrhythmic efficacy of XSN is based on its class I and Class III antiarrhythmic properties by suppression hNaV1.5 channel and hERG channels, which are directly responsible for XSN's effect on APA suppression and APD prolongation.Entities:
Keywords: Chinese Herbal Medicine; Xin Su Ning; anti-arrhythmic drugs; electrophysiology; premature ventricular contractions
Year: 2019 PMID: 30787875 PMCID: PMC6372541 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2019.00070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1The effect of XSN on the ECG of ex vivo perfused rat heart. XSN at 0.4 g/L decreased the R wave amplitude, but increased T wave amplitude without changing QRS and QT interval. Heart rate (RR interval) did not show significant changes during XSN application and at 10 min washout of the medicine.
Percentage change of R wave, T wave, QRS, QT, and RR interval (% of control, n = 5).
| R wave | T wave | QRS interval | QT interval | RR interval | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| XSN | 54.00 ± 5.47∗∗∗ | 247.71 ± 41.12∗ | 123.72 ± 12.26 | 114.29 ± 10.73 | 91.06 ± 7.06 |
| Washout | 71.91 ± 9.93∗ | 103.31 ± 14.85 | 111.94 ± 7.06 | 116.73 ± 8.36 | 104.30 ± 11.86 |
FIGURE 2Effect of 0.4 g/L XSN on inhibition of peak Na+ current on primary rat ventricular myocytes (n = 5). The enlarged traces of the peaks of the action potentials are shown in the box on the bottom right.
FIGURE 3Inhibitory effect of XSN on human NaV1.5 channel. (A) Representative current tracing in control and in the presence of 0.8 g/L XSN. (B) Dose response curve of the inhibition on hNaV1.5 channel by XSN (n = 5). The effect of steady activation curve (C), the steady inactivation curve (D) and the steady inactivation recovery curve (E) by XSN with multiple state inhibition (n = 5).
FIGURE 4Use-dependent block of INa following acceleration from 1 to 10 Hz in control and after exposure to 0.8 and 1.6 g/L XSN. For control n = 12, 1 Hz n = 7, 10 Hz n = 5. Both of 0.8 and 1.6 g/L XSN in the frequency of 1 or 10 Hz showed significantly use-dependently block of Nav1.5 channel.
FIGURE 5Inhibitory effect of XSN on hERG channel. (A) Representative current tracing in control and in the presence of 0.4 g/L XSN. (B) Dose response curve of the inhibition on hERG channel by XSN (n = 5). The effect of steady activation curve (C), the steady inactivation curve (D) by XSN with multiple state inhibition (n = 8).