The anticonvulsant retigabine suppresses neuronal Kv2-mediated currents

Jeroen I Stas, Elke Bocksteins, Camilla S Jensen, Nicole Schmitt, Dirk J Snyders

13 Citations (Scopus)
73 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Enhancement of neuronal M-currents, generated through KV7.2-KV7.5 channels, has gained much interest for its potential in developing treatments for hyperexcitability-related disorders such as epilepsy. Retigabine, a KV7 channel opener, has proven to be an effective anticonvulsant and has recently also gained attention due to its neuroprotective properties. In the present study, we found that the auxiliary KCNE2 subunit reduced the KV7.2-KV7.3 retigabine sensitivity approximately 5-fold. In addition, using both mammalian expression systems and cultured hippocampal neurons we determined that low μM retigabine concentrations had 'off-target' effects on KV2.1 channels which have recently been implicated in apoptosis. Clinical retigabine concentrations (0.3-3 μM) inhibited KV2.1 channel function upon prolonged exposure. The suppression of the KV2.1 conductance was only partially reversible. Our results identified KV2.1 as a new molecular target for retigabine, thus giving a potential explanation for retigabine's neuroprotective properties.

Original languageEnglish
Article number35080
JournalScientific Reports
Volume6
Number of pages12
ISSN2045-2322
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Oct 2016

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