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American Journal of Translational Research 2015

Inhibition of acid sensing ion channel by ligustrazine on angina model in rat.

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Zhi-Gang Zhang
Xiao-Lan Zhang
Xian-Yue Wang
Zhu-Rong Luo
Jing-Chun Song

Keywords

Abstract

Ligustrazine, a compound extracted from roots of Ligusticum chuanxiong, is widely used in Chinese traditional medicine to treat cardiac and cerebrovascular diseases and pain, including angina. The mechanism(s) of ligustrazine's effect to reduce angina is not clear. Angina is mediated by cardiac afferent sensory neurons. These neurons display a large acid-evoked depolarizing sodium current that can initiate action potentials in response to acidification that accompanies myocardial ischemia. Acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) mediate this current. Here we tested the hypothesis that ligustrazine reduces ischemia-induced cardiac dysfunction and acid-evoked pain by an action to inhibit ASIC-mediated current. The effects of ligustrazine to attenuate ischemia-induced ST-segment depression, T wave changes, and myocardial infarct size in hearts of anesthetized rats were determined. Effects of ligustrazine on currents mediated by ASICs expressed in cultured Chinese hamster ovary cells, and effects of the drug on acid-induced nociceptive behavior and acid-induced currents in isolated dorsal root ganglions cells were measured. Ligustrazine significantly attenuated acid-induced ASIC currents, reduced cardiac ischemia-induced electrical dysfunction and infarct size, and decreased the nociceptive response to injection of acid into the paw of the rat hindlimb. The ASIC channel inhibitor A-317567 similarly reduced electrical dysfunction, infarct size, and nociceptive behavior in the rat. Inhibition of ASICs by ligustrazine may explain at least in part the beneficial effects of the drug that are observed in patients with ischemic heart disease and angina.

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