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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: amiloride ; blocking kinetics ; structure-activity relationship ; Na channels ; frog skin ; fluctuation analysis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary The overall on-and off-rate constants for blocking epithelial Na channels by amiloride analogs were estimated by noise analysis of frog skin epithelium. The substituents at position-5 and −6 of the pyrazine ring of amiloride were varied in order to obtain the structure/rate constant relationship. (1) The off-rate constant increases with halo-substitutions at position-6 in the order Cl〈Br〈I〈F〈H. Substitution of Cl by H lowers the standard free energy of activation of the off-step by 2.3 kcal mol−1. The on-rate constant is not affected. Apparently the substituent at ring position-6 controls the duration of attachment in the blocking position. pK a considerations show that the duration is longer when the 6-substituent is more negatively polarized. We suggest that this substituent binds to the receptor by virtue of its electronegativity. (2) In contrast, replacement of the adjacent 5-amino group (electron donor) by H or Cl affects both the on-rate and the off-rate. The dual effect may be explained by a decrease of the electronic charge at more remote parts of the molecule (on-rate decrease), as well as at the 6-position (off-rate increase). Apparently the 5-amino group stabilizes the blocking position by increasing the electron density on the 6-ligand.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    The journal of membrane biology 105 (1988), S. 245-255 
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: sensory cells ; taste-and chemoreception ; gustatory senses ; salt-taste ; patch-clamp whole-cell recording ; Na channels ; amiloride
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary Isolated taste receptor cells from the frog tongue were investigated under whole-cell patch-clamp conditions. With the cytosolic potential head at −80 mV, more than 50% of the cells had a stationary inward Na current of 10 to 700 pA in Ringer's solution. This current was in some cells partially, in others completely, blockable by low concentrations of amiloride. With 110mm Na in the external and 10mm Na in the internal solution, the inhibition constant of amiloride was (at −80 mV) near 0.3 μm. In some cells the amiloride-sensitive conductance was Na specific; in others it passed both Na and K. The Na/K selectivity (estimated from reversal potentials) varied between 1 and 100. The blockability bysmall concentrations of amiloride resembled that of channels found in some Na-absorbing epithelia, but the channels of taste cells showed a surprisingly large range of ionic specificities. Receptor cells, whichin situ express these channels in their apical membrane, may be competent to detect the taste quality “salty.” The same cells also express TTX-blockable voltage-gated Na channels.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    The journal of membrane biology 95 (1987), S. 171-185 
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: amiloride ; analogs ; blocking kinetics ; structure-activity relationship ; Na channels ; frog skin ; fluctuation analysis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary The overall on- and off-rate constants for blockage of epithelial Na channels by amiloride analogs were estimated by noise analysis of the stationary Na current traversing frog skin epithelium. The (2-position) side chain structure of amiloride was varied in order to obtain structure/rate constant relationships. (1) Hydrophobic chain elongations (benzamil and related compounds of high blocking potency) increase the stability of the blocking complex (lowered off-rate), explained by attachment of the added phenyl moiety to a hydrophobic area near the site of side chain interaction with the channel protein. (2) Some other chain modifications show that the on-rate, which is smaller than a diffusion-limited rate, varies with side chain structure. In several cases this effect is not attributable to steric hindrance on encounter, and implies that the side chain interacts briefly with the channel protein (encounter complex) before the main blocking position of the molecule is attained. The encounter complex must be labile since the overall rate constants of blockage are not concentration-dependent. (3) In two cases, changes at the 2-position side chain and at other ring ligands, with known effects on the blocking rate constants, could be combined in one analog. The rate constants of blocking by the resulting compounds indicate that the structural changes have additive effects in terms of activation energies. (4) Along with other observations (voltage dependence of the rate constants and competition with the transported Na ion), these results suggest a blocking process of at least two steps. It appears that initially the 2-position side chain invades the outward-facing channel entrance, establishing a labile complex. Then the molecule is either released completely (no block) or the 6-ligand of the pyrazine ring gains access to its receptor counterpart, thus establishing the blocking complex, the lifetime of which is strongly determined by the electronegativity of the 6-ligand.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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