Pharmaceuticals (Aug 2024)

A Comparative Study of the Rapid (I<sub>Kr</sub>) and Slow (I<sub>Ks</sub>) Delayed Rectifier Potassium Currents in Undiseased Human, Dog, Rabbit, and Guinea Pig Cardiac Ventricular Preparations

  • Márta Ágoston,
  • Zsófia Kohajda,
  • László Virág,
  • Beáta Baláti,
  • Norbert Nagy,
  • Csaba Lengyel,
  • Miklós Bitay,
  • Gábor Bogáts,
  • András Vereckei,
  • Julius Gy. Papp,
  • András Varró,
  • Norbert Jost

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ph17081091
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 8
p. 1091

Abstract

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To understand the large inter-species variations in drug effects on repolarization, the properties of the rapid (IKr) and the slow (IKs) components of the delayed rectifier potassium currents were compared in myocytes isolated from undiseased human donor (HM), dog (DM), rabbit (RM) and guinea pig (GM) ventricles by applying the patch clamp and conventional microelectrode techniques at 37 °C. The amplitude of the E-4031-sensitive IKr tail current measured at −40 mV after a 1 s long test pulse of 20 mV, which was very similar in HM and DM but significant larger in RM and GM. The L-735,821-sensitive IKs tail current was considerably larger in GM than in RM. In HM, the IKs tail was even smaller than in DM. At 30 mV, the IKr component was activated extremely rapidly and monoexponentially in each studied species. The deactivation of the IKr component in HM, DM, and RM measured at −40 mV. After a 30 mV pulse, it was slow and biexponential, while in GM, the IKr tail current was best fitted triexponentially. At 30 mV, the IKs component activated slowly and had an apparent monoxponential time course in HM, DM, and RM. In contrast, in GM, the activation was clearly biexponential. In HM, DM, and RM, IKs component deactivation measured at −40 mV was fast and monoexponential, while in GM, in addition to the fast component, another slower component was also revealed. These results suggest that the IK in HM resembles that measured in DM and RM and considerably differs from that observed in GM. These findings suggest that the dog and rabbit are more appropriate species than the guinea pig for preclinical evaluation of new potential drugs expected to affect cardiac repolarization.

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