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Vol. 282, Issue 2, 707-714, 1997
Department of Molecular Pharmacology and Biological Chemistry,
Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois
The effects of riluzole, a neuroprotective drug, on
tetrodotoxin-sensitive (TTX-S) and tetrodotoxin-resistant (TTX-R)
sodium channels in rat dorsal root ganglion neurons were studied using the whole-cell patch clamp technique. At the resting potential, riluzole preferentially blocked TTX-S sodium channels, whereas at more
negative potentials, it blocked both types of sodium channels almost
equally. The apparent dissociation constants for riluzole to block
TTX-S and TTX-R sodium channels in their resting state were 90 and 143 µM, respectively. Riluzole shifted the voltage dependence of
activation of TTX-R sodium channels in the depolarizing direction more
than that of TTX-S sodium channels. The voltage dependence of the fast
inactivation of both types of sodium channels was shifted in the
hyperpolarizing direction in a dose-dependent manner, and the apparent
dissociation constants for riluzole to block the inactivated channels
were estimated to be 2 and 3 µM for the TTX-S and TTX-R sodium
channels, respectively, indicating a much higher affinity for the
inactivated channels than for the resting channels. Riluzole was
equally effective in blocking both types of sodium channels in their
slow inactivated state. Since more TTX-S channels are inactivated than
TTX-R channels at the resting potential, riluzole blocks TTX-S sodium
channels more potently than TTX-R sodium channels. It was concluded
that one of the mechanisms by which riluzole exerts its neuroprotective action is to preferentially block the inactivated sodium channel of
damaged or depolarized neurons under ischemic conditions, thereby suppressing excess stimulation of the glutamatergic receptors and
massive influx of Ca++.