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Selected Abstracts > Arrhythmia > Acacetin, a Natural Flavone, Selectively Inhibits Human Atrial Repolarization Potassium Currents and Prevents Atrial Fibrillation in Dogs
Title: Acacetin, a Natural Flavone, Selectively Inhibits Human Atrial Repolarization Potassium Currents and Prevents Atrial Fibrillation in Dogs
Background--The development of atrium-selective antiarrhythmic agents is a current strategy for inhibiting atrial fibrillation (AF). The present study investigated whether the natural flavone acacetin from the traditional Chinese medicine Xuelianhua would be an atrium-selective anti-AF agent. Methods and Results--The...
Background--The
development of atrium-selective antiarrhythmic agents is a current strategy for
inhibiting atrial fibrillation (AF). The present study investigated whether the
natural flavone acacetin from the traditional Chinese medicine Xuelianhua
would be an atrium-selective anti-AF agent.
Methods
and Results--The effects of acacetin on human atrial
ultrarapid delayed rectifier K_ current
(IKur) and other cardiac
ionic currents were studied with a whole-cell patch technique. Acacetin
suppressed IKur and
the transient outward K_ current
(IC50 3.2 and 9.2 _mol/L,
respectively) and prolonged action potential duration in human atrial myocytes.
The compound blocked the acetylcholine-activated K_ current; however, it had no
effect on the Na_ current,
L-type Ca2_
current, or inward-rectifier K_
current in guinea pig cardiac myocytes. Although acacetin caused a
weak reduction in the hERG and hKCNQ1/hKCNE1 channels stably expressed in HEK
293 cells, it did not prolong the corrected QT interval in rabbit hearts. In
anesthetized dogs, acacetin (5 mg/kg) prolonged the atrial effective refractory
period in both the right and left atria 1 to 4 hours after intraduodenal
administration without prolongation of the corrected QT interval, whereas
sotalol at 5 mg/kg prolonged both the atrial effective refractory period and
the corrected QT interval. Acacetin prevented AF induction at doses of 2.5
mg/kg (50%), 5 mg/kg (85.7%), and 10 mg/kg (85.7%). Sotalol 5 mg/kg also prevented
AF induction (60%).
Conclusions--The
present study demonstrates that the natural compound acacetin is an
atrium-selective agent that prolongs the atrial effective refractory period
without prolonging the corrected QT interval and effectively prevents AF in
anesthetized dogs after intraduodenal administration. These results indicate
that oral acacetin is a promising atrium-selective agent for the treatment of
AF. (Circulation.
2008;117:2449-2457