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

High- and low-affinity sites for [3H]dofetilide binding to guinea pig myocytes.

Dofetilide specifically blocks the rapid component of the delayed rectifier current (IKr) at nanomolar concentrations in a saturable manner, suggesting the presence of a receptor. We characterized two [3H]dofetilide binding sites to ventricular myocytes from adult guinea pigs by using a conventional filter assay. Scatchard analysis revealed two binding sites with different affinities: a high-affinity site (Kd, 2.8 +/- 0.3 x 10(-8) mol/L; Bmax, 76 +/- 15 fmol/10(6) myocytes) and a low-affinity site (Kd, 1.64 +/- 0.4 x 10(-6) mol/L; Bmax, 1620 +/- 260 fmol/10(6) myocytes) (n = 11). Kinetic studies showed that there were two dissociation rate constants for [3H]dofetilide (0.02 +/- 0.005 min-1 [high-affinity site] and 0.22 +/- 0.064 min-1 [low-affinity site], n = 4), although the observed association rate constant is equally well fit to a single- or two-site model. The ability of known IKr blockers to compete with [3H]dofetilide binding to both sites was assessed. E4031, clofilium, quinidine, and sotalol competed for binding at both sites. Disopyramide and NAPA only competed for a single binding site. The mean IC50 values for inhibition of binding to both the high- and low-affinity binding sites correlated with their concentrations required to inhibit IKr in electrophysiological studies. However, inhibition of [3H]dofetilide binding to the high-affinity site by class III antiarrhythmic drugs occurred at pharmacological concentrations, whereas suprapharmacological concentrations were required to inhibit binding to the low-affinity site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[1]

References

  1. High- and low-affinity sites for [3H]dofetilide binding to guinea pig myocytes. Duff, H.J., Feng, Z.P., Sheldon, R.S. Circ. Res. (1995) [Pubmed]
 
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