Class III antiarrhythmic drugs amiodarone and dronedarone impair KIR 2.1 backward trafficking.
Yuan JiHiroki TakanariMuge QileLukas NalosMarien J C HoutmanFee L RomundeRaimond HeukersPaul M P van Bergen En HenegouwenMarc A VosMarcel A G van der HeydenPublished in: Journal of cellular and molecular medicine (2017)
Drug-induced ion channel trafficking disturbance can cause cardiac arrhythmias. The subcellular level at which drugs interfere in trafficking pathways is largely unknown. KIR 2.1 inward rectifier channels, largely responsible for the cardiac inward rectifier current (IK1 ), are degraded in lysosomes. Amiodarone and dronedarone are class III antiarrhythmics. Chronic use of amiodarone, and to a lesser extent dronedarone, causes serious adverse effects to several organs and tissue types, including the heart. Both drugs have been described to interfere in the late-endosome/lysosome system. Here we defined the potential interference in KIR 2.1 backward trafficking by amiodarone and dronedarone. Both drugs inhibited IK1 in isolated rabbit ventricular cardiomyocytes at supraclinical doses only. In HK-KWGF cells, both drugs dose- and time-dependently increased KIR 2.1 expression (2.0 ± 0.2-fold with amiodarone: 10 μM, 24 hrs; 2.3 ± 0.3-fold with dronedarone: 5 μM, 24 hrs) and late-endosomal/lysosomal KIR 2.1 accumulation. Increased KIR 2.1 expression level was also observed in the presence of Nav 1.5 co-expression. Augmented KIR 2.1 protein levels and intracellular accumulation were also observed in COS-7, END-2, MES-1 and EPI-7 cells. Both drugs had no effect on Kv 11.1 ion channel protein expression levels. Finally, amiodarone (73.3 ± 10.3% P < 0.05 at -120 mV, 5 μM) enhanced IKIR2.1 upon 24-hrs treatment, whereas dronedarone tended to increase IKIR2.1 and it did not reach significance (43.8 ± 5.5%, P = 0.26 at -120 mV; 2 μM). We conclude that chronic amiodarone, and potentially also dronedarone, treatment can result in enhanced IK1 by inhibiting KIR 2.1 degradation.
Keyphrases
- drug induced
- liver injury
- poor prognosis
- induced apoptosis
- left ventricular
- heart failure
- binding protein
- cell cycle arrest
- endothelial cells
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- atrial fibrillation
- long non coding rna
- small molecule
- climate change
- amino acid
- cell death
- human health
- protein protein
- congenital heart disease
- catheter ablation