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  • Dihydropyridine inhibition of the glycine receptor: subunit selectivity and a molecular determinant of inhibition.

Dihydropyridine inhibition of the glycine receptor: subunit selectivity and a molecular determinant of inhibition.

Neuropharmacology (2008-07-29)
Xuebin Chen, Brett Cromer, Timothy I Webb, Zhe Yang, Janina Hantke, Robert J Harvey, Michael W Parker, Joseph W Lynch
ABSTRACT

The dihydropyridines (DHPs), nifedipine and nicardipine, modulate native glycine receptors (GlyRs) at micromolar concentrations. Nicardipine has a biphasic potentiating and inhibitory effect, whereas nifedipine causes inhibition only. The present study sought to investigate (1) the molecular mechanism by which these compounds inhibit recombinant GlyRs, and (2) their potential utility as subunit-selective inhibitors of alpha1, alpha1beta, alpha3 and alpha3beta GlyRs. The rate of onset of inhibition in the open state was accelerated by pre-application of DHP in the closed state, with the degree of acceleration proportional to the concentration of pre-applied DHP. This implies a non-inhibitory binding site close to the DHP inhibitory site. DHP inhibition was use-dependent and independent of glycine concentration, consistent with a pore-blocking mode of action. DHP sensitivity was abolished by the G2'A mutation, providing a strong case for a DHP binding site in the pore. Nifedipine exhibited an approximately 10-fold higher inhibitory potency at alpha1-containing relative to alpha3-containing receptors, whereas nicardipine was only weakly selective for alpha1-containing GlyRs. The differential sensitivities of nifedipine and nicardipine for different GlyR isoforms suggest that DHPs may be a useful resource to screen as pharmacological tools for selectively inhibiting different synaptic GlyR isoforms.

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Picrotoxinin