4.8 Article

Cardiac Late Sodium Channel Current Is a Molecular Target for the Sodium/Glucose Cotransporter 2 Inhibitor Empagliflozin

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 143, Issue 22, Pages 2188-2204

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.121.053350

Keywords

cardiac sodium channel; clinical perspective; empagliflozin; heart failure; SGLT2 inhibitors

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. European Union [665501]
  3. Research Foundation Flanders
  4. Alberta Diabetes Institute
  5. Natural Sciences Engineering Research Council of Canada
  6. Alberta In-novates Graduate Studentship in Health Innovation
  7. Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Scholarship
  8. Alberta Innovates
  9. Dr Rod Eidem Diabetes Research Fund

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SGLT2 inhibitors have cardioprotective effects against heart failure by inhibiting the late component of the cardiac sodium channel current.
Background: SGLT2 (sodium/glucose cotransporter 2) inhibitors exert robust cardioprotective effects against heart failure in patients with diabetes, and there is intense interest to identify the underlying molecular mechanisms that afford this protection. Because the induction of the late component of the cardiac sodium channel current (late-I-Na) is involved in the etiology of heart failure, we investigated whether these drugs inhibit late-I-Na. Methods: Electrophysiological, in silico molecular docking, molecular, calcium imaging, and whole heart perfusion techniques were used to address this question. Results: The SGLT2 inhibitor empagliflozin reduced late-I-Na in cardiomyocytes from mice with heart failure and in cardiac Nav1.5 sodium channels containing the long QT syndrome 3 mutations R1623Q or Delta KPQ. Empagliflozin, dapagliflozin, and canagliflozin are all potent and selective inhibitors of H2O2-induced late-I-Na (half maximal inhibitory concentration = 0.79, 0.58, and 1.26 mu M, respectively) with little effect on peak sodium current. In mouse cardiomyocytes, empagliflozin reduced the incidence of spontaneous calcium transients induced by the late-I-Na activator veratridine in a similar manner to tetrodotoxin, ranolazine, and lidocaine. The putative binding sites for empagliflozin within Nav1.5 were investigated by simulations of empagliflozin docking to a three-dimensional homology model of human Nav1.5 and point mutagenic approaches. Our results indicate that empagliflozin binds to Nav1.5 in the same region as local anesthetics and ranolazine. In an acute model of myocardial injury, perfusion of isolated mouse hearts with empagliflozin or tetrodotoxin prevented activation of the cardiac NLRP3 (nuclear-binding domain-like receptor 3) inflammasome and improved functional recovery after ischemia. Conclusions: Our results provide evidence that late-I-Na may be an important molecular target in the heart for the SGLT2 inhibitors, contributing to their unexpected cardioprotective effects.

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