1. Academic Validation
  2. Novel nonpeptide agents potently block the C-type inactivated conformation of Kv1.3 and suppress T cell activation

Novel nonpeptide agents potently block the C-type inactivated conformation of Kv1.3 and suppress T cell activation

  • Mol Pharmacol. 1996 Dec;50(6):1672-9.
A Nguyen 1 J C Kath D C Hanson M S Biggers P C Canniff C B Donovan R J Mather M J Bruns H Rauer J Aiyar A Lepple-Wienhues G A Gutman S Grissmer M D Cahalan K G Chandy
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of California, Irvine 92717, USA.
PMID: 8967992
Abstract

The nonpeptide agent CP-339,818 (1-benzyl-4-pentylimino-1,4-dihydroquinoline) and two analogs (CP-393,223 and CP-394,322) that differ only with respect to the type of substituent at the N1 position, potently blocked the Kv1.3 channel in T lymphocytes. A fourth compound (CP-393,224), which has a smaller and less-lipophilic group at N1, was 100-200-fold less potent, suggesting that a large lipophilic group at this position is necessary for drug activity. CP-339,818 blocked Kv1.3 from the outside with a IC50 value of approximately 200 nM and 1:1 stoichiometry and competitively inhibited 125I-charybdotoxin from binding to the external vestibule of Kv1.3. This drug inhibited Kv1.3 in a use-dependent manner by preferentially blocking the C-type inactivated state of the channel. CP-339,818 was a significantly less potent blocker of Kv1.1, Kv1.2, Kv1.5, Kv1.6, Kv3.1-4, and Kv4.2; the only exception was Kv1.4, a cardiac and neuronal A-type K+ channel. CP-339,818 had no effect on two other T cell channels (I(CRAC) and intermediate-conductance K(Ca)) implicated in T cell mitogenesis. This drug suppresses human T cell activation, suggesting that blockade of Kv1.3 alone is sufficient to inhibit this process.

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