Stereoselective actions of thiadiazinones on canine cardiac myocytes and myofilaments.

RJ Solaro, G Gambassi, DM Warshaw… - Circulation …, 1993 - Am Heart Assoc
RJ Solaro, G Gambassi, DM Warshaw, MR Keller, HA Spurgeon, N Beier, EG Lakatta
Circulation research, 1993Am Heart Assoc
Thiadiazinones are cardiotonic agents that have potent, direct, and stereoselective actions
on the myofilament response to Ca2+ in intact myocardium. Their mechanism of action is
unknown. We studied the effects of racemic thiadiazinone, EMD 53998 (5-[1-(3, 4-
dimethoxybenzoyl)-1, 2, 3, 4-tetrahydro-6-quinolyl]-6-meth yl-3, 6-dihydro-2H-1, 3, 4-
thiadiazin-2-one), and its enantiomers on Ca2+ signaling in myocytes, myofilaments, and
myofilament proteins. Intact canine ventricular myocytes responded to the positive …
Thiadiazinones are cardiotonic agents that have potent, direct, and stereoselective actions on the myofilament response to Ca2+ in intact myocardium. Their mechanism of action is unknown. We studied the effects of racemic thiadiazinone, EMD 53998 (5-[1-(3,4-dimethoxybenzoyl)-1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-6-quinolyl]-6-meth yl-3,6- dihydro-2H-1,3,4-thiadiazin-2-one), and its enantiomers on Ca2+ signaling in myocytes, myofilaments, and myofilament proteins. Intact canine ventricular myocytes responded to the positive enantiomer, EMD 57033, with an increase in the extent of shortening during twitch contractions without increasing the peak amplitude of the Ca2+ transient. The negative enantiomer, EMD 57439, also increased the extent of shortening, but in this case there was a concentration-dependent increase in the peak amplitude of the Ca2+ transient. This is predicted from in vitro data showing that this enantiomer is a relatively potent inhibitor of phosphodiesterase activity. There was no effect of EMD 57439 on the relation between pCa and actomyosin Mg-ATPase activity of canine heart myofibrils. In contrast, EMD 57033 shifted the pCa-Mg-ATPase activity relation to the left. There was no effect of either enantiomer on Ca2+ binding to myofilament troponin C. Moreover EMD 57033, but not EMD 57439, stimulated actomyosin ATPase activity of myofilament preparations in which either troponin or troponin-tropomyosin had been extracted. EMD 57033 had no effect on Mg-ATPase activity of pure ventricular myosin. EMD 57033 also stimulated the velocity of actin filament sliding on myosin heads adhered to nitrocellulose-coated glass coverslips. We propose that the action of EMD 57033 is at the actin-myosin interface on a "receptor" that may be on actin or the crossbridge. Drug binding to this domain appears to reverse the inhibition of actin-myosin interactions by troponin-tropomyosin and also to promote transition of crossbridges from weak to strong force-generating states.
Am Heart Assoc