1. Academic Validation
  2. In vivo cardiac electrophysiologic and antiarrhythmic effects of an isoquinoline IKur blocker, ISQ-1, in rat, dog, and nonhuman primate

In vivo cardiac electrophysiologic and antiarrhythmic effects of an isoquinoline IKur blocker, ISQ-1, in rat, dog, and nonhuman primate

  • J Cardiovasc Pharmacol. 2007 Apr;49(4):236-45. doi: 10.1097/FJC.0b013e3180325b2a.
Christopher P Regan 1 Gary L Stump Audrey A Wallace Kenneth D Anderson Charles J McIntyre Nigel J Liverton Joseph J Lynch Jr
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Stroke and Neurodegeneration, Merck Research Laboratories, West Point, Pennsylvania 19486, USA.
Abstract

The cardiac electrophysiologic effects of ISQ-1, an isoquinolinone I(Kur) blocker, were characterized in vivo. In rat, ISQ-1 elicited maximal 33% to 36% increases in atrial and ventricular refractoriness at a plasma concentration of 11.5 microM. In African green monkey, ISQ-1 increased atrial refractory period (maximal 17% at plasma concentration up to 20 microM) with no effect on ventricular refractory period or ECG QTc. Likewise in dog, ISQ-1 increased atrial refractory period (maximal 16% at plasma concentration up to 2 microM) with no effect on ventricular refractory period or QTc. In contrast, studies with ibutilide in nonhuman primate and dog demonstrated concomitant increases in atrial and ventricular refractoriness and QTc. Additionally, in a dog model of atrial flutter, ISQ-1 terminated ongoing flutter at doses (2.5 +/- 0.5 mg/kg IV) that selectively prolonged atrial refractoriness (13% increase), whereas flutter termination with ibutilide occurred at doses that increased both atrial and ventricular refractoriness as well as QTc. Of note, the cardiac electrophysiologic profiles displayed by ISQ-1 in these species were similar to those reported previously by our lab with a structurally distinct I(Kur) blocker. Taken together, these results further support the inhibition of I(Kur) as an approach to terminate atrial arrhythmia.

Figures
Products