The Pore-Lipid Interface: Role of Amino-Acid Determinants of Lipophilic Access by Ivabradine to the hERG1 Pore Domain

Abnormal cardiac electrical activity is a common side effect caused by unintended block of the promiscuous drug target human ether-à-go-go-related gene (hERG1), the pore-forming domain of the delayed rectifier K+ channel in the heart. hERG1 block leads to a prolongation of the QT interval, a phase o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular pharmacology 2019-08, Vol.96 (2), p.259-271
Hauptverfasser: Perissinotti, Laura, Guo, Jiqing, Kudaibergenova, Meruyert, Lees-Miller, James, Ol’khovich, Marina, Sharapova, Angelica, Perlovich, German L., Muruve, Daniel A., Gerull, Brenda, Noskov, Sergei Yu, Duff, Henry J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abnormal cardiac electrical activity is a common side effect caused by unintended block of the promiscuous drug target human ether-à-go-go-related gene (hERG1), the pore-forming domain of the delayed rectifier K+ channel in the heart. hERG1 block leads to a prolongation of the QT interval, a phase of the cardiac cycle that underlies myocyte repolarization detectable on the electrocardiogram. Even newly released drugs such as heart-rate lowering agent ivabradine block the rapid delayed rectifier current IKr, prolong action potential duration, and induce potentially lethal arrhythmia known as torsades de pointes. In this study, we describe a critical drug-binding pocket located at the lateral pore surface facing the cellular membrane. Mutations of the conserved M651 residue alter ivabradine-induced block but not by the common hERG1 blocker dofetilide. As revealed by molecular dynamics simulations, binding of ivabradine to a lipophilic pore access site is coupled to a state-dependent reorientation of aromatic residues F557 and F656 in the S5 and S6 helices. We show that the M651 mutation impedes state-dependent dynamics of F557 and F656 aromatic cassettes at the protein-lipid interface, which has a potential to disrupt drug-induced block of the channel. This fundamentally new mechanism coupling the channel dynamics and small-molecule access from the membrane into the hERG1 intracavitary site provides a simple rationale for the well established state-dependence of drug blockade. The drug interference with the function of the cardiac hERG channels represents one of the major sources of drug-induced heart disturbances. We found a novel and a critical drug-binding pocket adjacent to a lipid-facing surface of the hERG1 channel, which furthers our molecular understanding of drug-induced QT syndrome. ▪
ISSN:0026-895X
1521-0111
DOI:10.1124/mol.118.115642