1. Academic Validation
  2. Blockade of epithelial Na+ channels by triamterenes - underlying mechanisms and molecular basis

Blockade of epithelial Na+ channels by triamterenes - underlying mechanisms and molecular basis

  • Pflugers Arch. 1996 Sep;432(5):760-6. doi: 10.1007/s004240050196.
A E Busch 1 H Suessbrich K Kunzelmann A Hipper R Greger S Waldegger E Mutschler B Lindemann F Lang
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Physiologisches Institut I, Eberhard-Karls-University Tübingen, Gmelinstrasse 5, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany.
Abstract

The three subunits (alpha, beta, gamma) encoding for the rat epithelial Na+ channel (rENaC) were expressed in Xenopus oocytes, and the induced Na+ conductance was tested for its sensitivity to various triamterene derivatives. Triamterene blocked rENaC in a voltage-dependent manner, and was 100-fold less potent than amiloride at pH 7.5. At -90 mV and -40 mV, the IC50 values were 5 microM and 10 microM, respectively. The blockage by triamterene, which is a weak base with a PKA of 6.2, was dependent on the extracellular pH. The IC50 was 1 microM at pH 6.5 and only 17 microM at pH 8.5, suggesting that the protonated compound is more potent than the unprotonated one. According to a simple kinetic analysis, the apparent inhibition constants at -90 mV were 0.74 microM for the charged and 100.6 microM for the uncharged triamterene. The main metabolite of triamterene, p-hydroxytriamterene sulfuric acid ester, inhibited rENaC with an approximately twofold lower affinity. Derivatives of triamterene, in which the p-position of the phenylmoiety was substituted by acidic or basic residues, inhibited rENaC with IC50 values in the range of 0.1-20 microM. Acidic and basic triamterenes produced a rENaC blockade with a similar voltage and pH dependence as the parent compound, suggesting that the pteridinemoiety of triamterene is responsible for that characteristic. Expression of the rENaC alpha-subunit-deletion mutant, Delta278-283, which lacks a putative amiloride-binding site, induced a Na+ channel with a greatly reduced affinity for both triamterene and amiloride. In summary, rENaC is a molecular target for triamterene that binds to its binding site within the electrical field, preferably as a positively charged molecule in a voltage- and pH-dependent fashion. We propose that amiloride and triamterene bind to rENaC using very similar mechanisms.

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