Biophysical characterization of KV3.1 potassium channel activating compounds

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Biophysical characterization of KV3.1 potassium channel activating compounds. / Taskin, Bahar; von Schoubye, Nadia Lybøl; Sheykhzade, Majid; Bastlund, Jesper Frank; Grunnet, Morten; Jespersen, Thomas.

In: European Journal of Pharmacology, Vol. 758, 05.07.2015, p. 164-170.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Taskin, B, von Schoubye, NL, Sheykhzade, M, Bastlund, JF, Grunnet, M & Jespersen, T 2015, 'Biophysical characterization of KV3.1 potassium channel activating compounds', European Journal of Pharmacology, vol. 758, pp. 164-170. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejphar.2015.03.061

APA

Taskin, B., von Schoubye, N. L., Sheykhzade, M., Bastlund, J. F., Grunnet, M., & Jespersen, T. (2015). Biophysical characterization of KV3.1 potassium channel activating compounds. European Journal of Pharmacology, 758, 164-170. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejphar.2015.03.061

Vancouver

Taskin B, von Schoubye NL, Sheykhzade M, Bastlund JF, Grunnet M, Jespersen T. Biophysical characterization of KV3.1 potassium channel activating compounds. European Journal of Pharmacology. 2015 Jul 5;758:164-170. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejphar.2015.03.061

Author

Taskin, Bahar ; von Schoubye, Nadia Lybøl ; Sheykhzade, Majid ; Bastlund, Jesper Frank ; Grunnet, Morten ; Jespersen, Thomas. / Biophysical characterization of KV3.1 potassium channel activating compounds. In: European Journal of Pharmacology. 2015 ; Vol. 758. pp. 164-170.

Bibtex

@article{6658045cfc85455e8af83e8ae03049fa,
title = "Biophysical characterization of KV3.1 potassium channel activating compounds",
abstract = "The effect of two positive modulators, RE1 and EX15, on the voltage-gated K+ channel Kv3.1 was investigated using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique on HEK293 cells expressing Kv3.1a. RE1 and EX15 increased the Kv3.1 currents in a concentration-dependent manner with an EC50 value of 4.5 and 1.3µM, respectively. However, high compound concentrations caused an inhibition of the Kv3.1 current. The compound-induced activation of Kv3.1 channels showed a profound hyperpolarized shift in activation kinetics. 30µM RE1 shifted V½ from 5.63±0.31mV to -9.71±1.00mV and 10µM EX15 induced a shift from 10.77±0.32mV to -15.11±1.57mV. The activation time constant (Tauact) was reduced for both RE1 and EX15, with RE1 being the fastest activator. The deactivation time constant (Taudeact) was also markedly reduced for both RE1 and EX15, with EX15 inducing the most prominent effect. Furthermore, subjected to depolarizing pulses at 30Hz, both compounds was showing a use-dependent effect resulting in a reduction of the compound-mediated effect. However, during these conditions, RE1- and EX15-modified current amplitudes still exceeded the control condition amplitudes by up to 200%. In summary, the present study introduces the first detailed biophysical characterization of two new Kv3.1 channel modifying compounds with different modulating properties.",
author = "Bahar Taskin and {von Schoubye}, {Nadia Lyb{\o}l} and Majid Sheykhzade and Bastlund, {Jesper Frank} and Morten Grunnet and Thomas Jespersen",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.",
year = "2015",
month = jul,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1016/j.ejphar.2015.03.061",
language = "English",
volume = "758",
pages = "164--170",
journal = "European Journal of Pharmacology",
issn = "0014-2999",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Biophysical characterization of KV3.1 potassium channel activating compounds

AU - Taskin, Bahar

AU - von Schoubye, Nadia Lybøl

AU - Sheykhzade, Majid

AU - Bastlund, Jesper Frank

AU - Grunnet, Morten

AU - Jespersen, Thomas

N1 - Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

PY - 2015/7/5

Y1 - 2015/7/5

N2 - The effect of two positive modulators, RE1 and EX15, on the voltage-gated K+ channel Kv3.1 was investigated using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique on HEK293 cells expressing Kv3.1a. RE1 and EX15 increased the Kv3.1 currents in a concentration-dependent manner with an EC50 value of 4.5 and 1.3µM, respectively. However, high compound concentrations caused an inhibition of the Kv3.1 current. The compound-induced activation of Kv3.1 channels showed a profound hyperpolarized shift in activation kinetics. 30µM RE1 shifted V½ from 5.63±0.31mV to -9.71±1.00mV and 10µM EX15 induced a shift from 10.77±0.32mV to -15.11±1.57mV. The activation time constant (Tauact) was reduced for both RE1 and EX15, with RE1 being the fastest activator. The deactivation time constant (Taudeact) was also markedly reduced for both RE1 and EX15, with EX15 inducing the most prominent effect. Furthermore, subjected to depolarizing pulses at 30Hz, both compounds was showing a use-dependent effect resulting in a reduction of the compound-mediated effect. However, during these conditions, RE1- and EX15-modified current amplitudes still exceeded the control condition amplitudes by up to 200%. In summary, the present study introduces the first detailed biophysical characterization of two new Kv3.1 channel modifying compounds with different modulating properties.

AB - The effect of two positive modulators, RE1 and EX15, on the voltage-gated K+ channel Kv3.1 was investigated using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique on HEK293 cells expressing Kv3.1a. RE1 and EX15 increased the Kv3.1 currents in a concentration-dependent manner with an EC50 value of 4.5 and 1.3µM, respectively. However, high compound concentrations caused an inhibition of the Kv3.1 current. The compound-induced activation of Kv3.1 channels showed a profound hyperpolarized shift in activation kinetics. 30µM RE1 shifted V½ from 5.63±0.31mV to -9.71±1.00mV and 10µM EX15 induced a shift from 10.77±0.32mV to -15.11±1.57mV. The activation time constant (Tauact) was reduced for both RE1 and EX15, with RE1 being the fastest activator. The deactivation time constant (Taudeact) was also markedly reduced for both RE1 and EX15, with EX15 inducing the most prominent effect. Furthermore, subjected to depolarizing pulses at 30Hz, both compounds was showing a use-dependent effect resulting in a reduction of the compound-mediated effect. However, during these conditions, RE1- and EX15-modified current amplitudes still exceeded the control condition amplitudes by up to 200%. In summary, the present study introduces the first detailed biophysical characterization of two new Kv3.1 channel modifying compounds with different modulating properties.

U2 - 10.1016/j.ejphar.2015.03.061

DO - 10.1016/j.ejphar.2015.03.061

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25845309

VL - 758

SP - 164

EP - 170

JO - European Journal of Pharmacology

JF - European Journal of Pharmacology

SN - 0014-2999

ER -

ID: 135368119