Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. [3H]-lifarizine bound saturably and reversibly to an apparently homogeneous class of high affinity sites in rat cerebrocortical membranes (Kd = 10.7 +/- 2.9 nM; Bmax = 5.10 +/- 1.43 pmol mg-1 protein). 2. The binding of [3H]-lifarizine was unaffected by sodium channel toxins binding to site 1 (tetrodotoxin), site 3 (alpha-scorpion venom) or site 5 (brevetoxin), Furthermore, lifarizine at concentrations up to 10 microM had no effect on [3H]-saxitoxin (STX) binding to toxin site 1. Lifarizine displaced [3H]-batrachotoxinin-A 20-alpha-benzoate (BTX) binding with moderate affinity (pIC50 7.31 +/- 0.24) indicating an interaction with toxin site 2. However, lifarizine accelerated the dissociation of [3H]-BTX and decreased both the affinity and density of sites labelled by [3H]-BTX, suggesting an allosteric interaction with toxin site 2. 3. The binding of [3H]-lifarizine was voltage-sensitive, binding to membranes with higher affinity than to synaptosomes (pIC50 for cold lifarizine = 7.99 +/- 0.09 in membranes and 6.68 +/- 0.14 in synaptosomes). Depolarization of synaptosomes with 130 mM KCl increased the affinity of lifarizine almost 10 fold (pIC50 = 7.86 +/- 0.25). This suggests that lifarizine binds selectively to inactivated sodium channels which predominate both in the membrane preparation and in the depolarized synaptosomal preparation. 4. There was negligible [3H]-lifarizine and [3H]-BTX binding to solubilized sodium channels, although [3H]-STX binding was retained under these conditions. 5. The potencies of a series of compounds in displacing [3H]-lifarizine from rat cerebrocortical membranes correlated well with their affinities for inactivated sodium channels estimated from whole-cell voltage clamp studies in the mouse neuroblastoma cell line, NIE-115 (r=0.96).6. These results show that [3H]-lifarizine is a high affinity ligand for neuronal sodium channels which potently and selectively labels a site, allosterically linked to toxin binding site 2, associated within activated sodium channels.
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PMID:[3H]-lifarizine, a high affinity probe for inactivated sodium channels. 758 9

1. The actions of the neuroprotective agent, lifarizine (RS-87476-190), on voltage-dependent Na+ currents have been examined in the neuroblastoma cell line, N1E-115, using the whole-cell variant of the patch clamp technique. 2. At a holding potential of -80 mV, lifarizine reduced the peak Na+ current evoked by a 10 ms depolarizing step with an IC50 of 1.3 microM. At holding potentials of -100 and -60 mV the IC50 concentrations of lifarizine were 7.3 microM and 0.3 microM, respectively. 3. At a holding potential of -100 mV, most channels were in the resting state and the IC50 value for inhibition of Na+ current should correspond to the dissociation constant of lifarizine for resting channels (KR). KR was therefore estimated to be 7.3 microM. 4. In the absence of lifarizine, recovery from inactivation following a 20 s depolarization from -100 mV to 0 mV was complete within 2 s. However, in the presence of 3 microM lifarizine recovery took place in a biexponential fashion with time constants of 7 s and 79 s. 5. Lifarizine (1 microM) had no effect on steady-state inactivation curves when conditioning pre-pulses of 1 s duration were used. However, when pre-pulse durations of 1 min were used the curves were shifted to the left by lifarizine by about 10 mV. Analysis of the shifts induced by a range of lifarizine concentrations revealed that the apparent affinity of lifarizine for the inactivated state of the channel (K1) was 0.19 microM. 6. Lifarizine (1 microM) had no effect on chloramine-T-modified Na+ currents, suggesting no significant open channel interaction. 7. Taken together, these data show that lifarizine is a potent voltage-dependent inhibitor of Na+currents in NIE-115 cells and that the voltage-dependence arises from an interaction of the compound with the inactivated state of the channel. The possible contribution of Na+ current inhibition to the neuroprotective actions of lifarizine is discussed.
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PMID:Actions of the novel neuroprotective agent, lifarizine (RS-87476), on voltage-dependent sodium currents in the neuroblastoma cell line, N1E-115. 759 43

1. The ability of lifarizine (RS-87476) to block human voltage-sensitive Na+ channel currents was studied by use of whole cell patch clamp recording from differentiated neuroblastoma cells (SH-SY5Y). 2. The Na+ conductance in differentiated SH-SY5Y cells (24.0 +/- 2.4 nS, n = 11) was half-maximally activated by 10 ms depolarizations to -37 +/- 2 mV and was half-maximally inactivated by predepolarizing pulses of 200 ms duration to -86 +/- 3 mV (n = 11). 3. At low stimulus frequencies (0.1 to 0.33 Hz) voltage-dependent sodium currents were completely blocked, in a concentration-dependent manner, by extracellular application of either tetrodotoxin (EC50 = 4 +/- 1 nM, n = 12) or by lifarizine (EC50 = 783 +/- 67 nM, n = 9). The onset of block by lifarizine (tau = 91 +/- 14 s at 10 microM) was considerably slower than that of tetrodotoxin (tau = 16 +/- 3 s at 100 nM). 4. Lifarizine (1 microM) reduced the peak sodium conductance in each cell (from 26.4 +/- 2.0 nS to 15.1 +/- 2.7 nS, n = 4) without changing the macroscopic kinetics of sodium current activation or inactivation (V1/2 = -35 1 mV and -87 +/- 4 mV respectively, n = 4). Similarly, lifarizine (1 microM) did not affect the reversal potential of the macroscopic sodium current (+14 +/- 5 mV in control and +16 +/- 2 mV in 1 microM lifarizine; n = 4) or reactivation time-constant (tau = 14.0 +/- 4.4 ms). 5. Block of the sodium channel open state by tetrodotoxin (30 nM) did not prevent the inhibition caused by a subsequent application of lifarizine (3 micro M). In contrast the depression caused by lifarizinewas readily reversible after pretreatment of cells with the local anaesthetic, lignocaine (1O mM).6. These data demonstrate that lifarizine is a use- and voltage-dependent antagonist of human voltage sensitive sodium currents. The slow kinetics and pharmacology of the block by lifarizine indicate that access of this drug to the channel is more restricted than that of tetrodotoxin and may involve an allosteric site or state of the channel that is also regulated by local anaesthetics.
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PMID:Block of human voltage-sensitive Na+ currents in differentiated SH-SY5Y cells by lifarizine. 783 13