Lj. Liu et al., RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN STRUCTURE AND SODIUM-CHANNEL BLOCKADE BY LIDOCAINE AND ITS AMINO-ALKYL DERIVATIVES, Journal of cardiovascular pharmacology, 24(5), 1994, pp. 803-812
We examined the relationship between the physicochemical properties an
d the sodium channel-blocking actions of lidocaine and four of its ami
no-alkyl derivatives. The homologues differ in lipid solubility (log p
2.7-4.1), pKa (6.9-9.0), and molecular weight (248.5-290.7). Macrosco
pic sodium currents were measured in rabbit atrial myocytes by the who
le-cell configuration of patch-clamp technique; single-channel current
s were measured by the cell-attached configuration. Lidocaine and its
homologues produced two patterns of block: tonic block and frequency-d
ependent block. Tonic block was highly correlated with lipid solubilit
y and pKa. The single-channel studies suggest that tonic block results
when the drug interacts with channel state(s) that precede opening. B
lock of open channels does not appear to play a prominent role in toni
c block. The rate of recovery from block was the major determinant of
the magnitude of frequency-dependent block. Highly lipid-soluble homol
ogues showed rapid recovery from block and little frequency-dependent
block. Drugs with lower lipid solubility and high pKa showed slower re
covery from block and greater frequency-dependent block. The seemingly
different requirements for tonic and frequency-dependent block can be
explained by drug interaction at a single receptor site.