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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

5beta-reduced neuroactive steroids are novel voltage-dependent blockers of T-type Ca2+ channels in rat sensory neurons in vitro and potent peripheral analgesics in vivo.

T-type Ca(2+) channels are believed to play an important role in pain perception, and anesthetic steroids such as alphaxalone and allopregnanolone, which have a 5alpha-configuration at the steroid A, B ring fusion, are known to inhibit T-type Ca(2+) channels and cause analgesia in a thermal nociceptive model (Soc Neurosci Abstr 29:657.9, 2003). To define further the structure-activity relationships for steroid analgesia, we synthesized and examined a series of 5beta-reduced steroids for their ability to induce thermal antinociception in rats when injected locally into the peripheral receptive fields of the nociceptors and studied their effects on T-type Ca(2+) channel function in vitro. We found that most of the steroids completely blocked T-type Ca(2+) currents in vitro with IC(50) values at a holding potential of -90 mV ranging from 2.8 to 40 microM. T current blockade exhibited mild voltage-dependence, suggesting that 5beta-reduced neuroactive steroids stabilize inactive states of the channel. For the most potent steroids, we found that other voltage-gated currents were not significantly affected at concentrations that produce nearly maximal blockade of T currents. All tested compounds induced dose-dependent analgesia in thermal nociceptive testing; the most potent effect (ED(50), 30 ng/100 microl) obtained with a compound [(3beta,5beta,17beta)-3-hydroxyandrostane-17-carbonitrile] that was also the most effective blocker of T currents. Compared with previously studied 5alpha-reduced steroids, these 5beta-reduced steroids are more efficacious blockers of neuronal T-type Ca(2+) channels and are potentially useful as new experimental reagents for understanding the role of neuronal T-type Ca(2+) channels in peripheral pain pathways.[1]

References

  1. 5beta-reduced neuroactive steroids are novel voltage-dependent blockers of T-type Ca2+ channels in rat sensory neurons in vitro and potent peripheral analgesics in vivo. Todorovic, S.M., Pathirathna, S., Brimelow, B.C., Jagodic, M.M., Ko, S.H., Jiang, X., Nilsson, K.R., Zorumski, C.F., Covey, D.F., Jevtovic-Todorovic, V. Mol. Pharmacol. (2004) [Pubmed]
 
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