Abstract
The ability to reconstitute sodium channel function and pharmacology in vitro using cloned subunits of known structure has greatly enhanced our understanding of the action of pyrethroid insecticides at this target and the structural determinants of resistance and interspecies selectivity. However, the use of reconstituted channels raises three critical questions: (1) Which subunits and subunit combinations should be used? (2) Which heterologous expression system is preferred? (3) Which combination of subunits and expression system best represents the function of native neuronal channels in the organism of interest? This review considers these questions from the perspective of recent research in this laboratory on the action of pyrethroid insecticides on rat Nav1.6 sodium channels by comparing the effects of heteroligomeric complex composition on channel function and insecticide response when channels are expressed in either Xenopus oocytes or stably-transformed HEK293 cells. These comparisons provide new insight into the influence of cellular context on the functional and pharmacological properties of expressed channels, the modulatory effects of sodium channel auxiliary subunits on the action of pyrethroids, and the relative fidelity of the Xenopus oocyte and HEK293 cell expression systems as model systems for studying of channel function and pyrethroid action.
Introduction
Pyrethroids owe their insecticidal activity to their ability to modify the gating of voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs), which mediate the transient increase in the sodium permeability of the nerve membrane that underlies the rising phase of the nerve action potential (Bloomquist, 1993; Soderlund, 1995; Narahashi, 1996). The identification of single amino acid substitutions in the VGSC sequences of resistant insects that reduce the susceptibility of expressed channels to pyrethroid modification provides further evidence that action on VGSCs underlies the primary insecticidal actions of pyrethroids (Soderlund and Knipple, 2003; Soderlund, 2005; Rinkevich et al., 2013).
The compelling evidence for effects on VGSCs as the mechanism of insecticidal activity of pyrethroids and the strong conservation of VGSC structure, function and pharmacology across animal taxa (Goldin, 2002) implicates VGSCs in the central nervous system (CNS) as important target sites for the acute neurotoxic effects of pyrethroids in mammals. However, individual CNS neurons express multiple VGSC isoforms and contain multiple functionally and pharmacologically distinct VGSC heteromultimeric complexes (Felts et al., 1997; Whitaker et al., 2000; Whitaker et al., 2001). Thus, the relative sensitivity of different isoforms and subunit complexes to pyrethroids, and therefore the relative importance of these isoforms and complexes as targets in intoxication, cannot be determined in studies using native neurons. This difficulty can be overcome by using in vitro systems for the heterologous expression and functional characterization of VGSC complexes of defined subunit structure.
This brief review summarizes and synthesizes work from this laboratory during the past decade using two heterologous expression systems – the unfertilized oocytes of the frog Xenopus laevis and the human embryonic kidney-derived HEK293 cell line - to express the rat Nav1.6 sodium channel, either alone or in combination with the rat β1 and β2 auxiliary subunits, and characterize both their functional properties and their pharmacological modification by pyrethroid insecticides. We also provide a provisional assessment of the relative merits of these two systems for predicting the action of pyrethroids on VGSCs in their native neuronal environment.
Structural and Pharmacological Heterogeneity of Mammalian Sodium Channels
Structural heterogeneity
Potential VGSC targets for pyrethroid intoxication in mammals comprise nine different pore-forming α subunit isoforms (Nav1.1 – Nav1.9) that exhibit unique patterns of developmental and anatomical expression and varied functional and pharmacological properties (Goldin, 2001). Four α subunits (Nav1.1, Nav1.2, Nav1.3, and Nav1.6) are abundantly expressed in either the embryonic or adult brain and represent possible targets for pyrethroid neurotoxicity in the CNS. The Nav1.3 and Nav1.6 isoforms are of particular interest because they are the most abundantly-expressed isoforms in the embryonic (Nav1.3) and adult (Nav1.6) brain (Felts et al., 1997; Whitaker et al., 2000; Shah et al., 2001; Whitaker et al., 2001).
Additional diversity among sodium channels results from the coassembly in the nerve membrane of an α subunit with one or two auxiliary β subunits that modulate channel gating and regulate expression (Isom, 2001). VGSCs in the adult brain are heterotrimeric complexes of one α subunit and two β subunits that differ in structure and their mode of association (covalent or noncovalent) with the α subunit (Hartshorne and Catterall, 1984). Although there are four β subunits in mammals, the ubiquitous expression of the β1 and β2 subunits in the adult brain implies that the majority of brain VGSCs are α+β1+β2 complexes (Whitaker et al., 2000; Shah et al., 2001; Schaller and Caldwell, 2003). However, the actual subunit composition of native sodium channel complexes remains to be determined.
Pharmacological heterogeneity
The correlation of pyrethroid sensitivity with mammalian VGSC structure using neuronal tissue preparations is complicated by the fact that neurons are now known to express multiple VGSC isoforms. However, a limited number of physiological studies suggest that sodium channel isoforms expressed in various mammalian tissues exhibit differential sensitivity to pyrethroids. The clearest evidence of the pharmacological heterogeneity among VGSC isoforms is found in the responses of the tetrodotoxin (TTX)-sensitive and TTX-resistant VGSC populations in dorsal root ganglion neurons to pyrethroids. The TTX-resistant sodium current in these cells is much more sensitive than the TTX-sensitive current to allethrin (Ginsburg and Narahashi, 1993), tetramethrin (Tatebayashi and Narahashi, 1994; Song et al., 1996) and deltamethrin (Tabarean and Narahashi, 1998).
Several studies have employed transient expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes to assess the action of pyrethroids on individual rat sodium channel isoforms and defined subunit complexes (Smith and Soderlund, 1998; Vais et al., 2000; Smith and Soderlund, 2001; Soderlund and Lee, 2001; Choi and Soderlund, 2006; Meacham et al., 2008; Tan and Soderlund, 2009; Tan and Soderlund, 2010; Tan and Soderlund, 2011a). Among the five rat isoforms examined to date, the Nav1.3, Nav1.6 and Nav1.8 isoforms are relatively sensitive to pyrethroid modification; in particular, the Nav1.8 isoform is likely responsible for the TTX-resistant, pyrethroid-sensitive current in dorsal root ganglion sensory neurons. By contrast the Nav1.2 and Nav1.7 isoforms are relatively resistant to pyrethroid modification.
The identification of Nav1.6 as a pyrethroid-sensitive isoform is of particular interest because Nav1.6 is the most abundant sodium channel α subunit in the adult rat brain (Auld et al., 1988), where it is preferentially expressed in regions of brain axons associated with action potential initiation (Hu et al., 2009). Nav1.6 is also the predominant isoform at nodes of Ranvier and is expressed in presynaptic and postsynaptic membranes of the neocortex and cerebellum (Caldwell et al., 2000). Thus, Nav1.6 sodium channels play important roles in both electrical and chemical signaling in the brain. The remainder of this review focuses on our studies of the function and pyrethroid pharmacology of the rat Nav1.6 isoform, either alone or in complexes with the β1 and β2 auxiliary subunits, expressed either in Xenopus oocyte or HEK293 cells.
Rat Nav1.6 Sodium Channels Expressed in Xenopus Oocytes
The Xenopus oocyte expression system
The Xenopus oocyte expression system is arguably the most widely-employed heterologous expression system for the reconstitution and study of both ligand-gated and voltage-gated ion channels (Goldin, 2006). When injected with synthetic mRNA the oocyte efficiently translates the message, performs post-translational modifications on the nascent protein, and inserts the mature protein into the cell membrane. For some channels, the oocyte system is the only heterologous expression system that will permit functional and pharmacological characterization in vitro. For example, all of our knowledge of heterologously-expressed insect VGSCs, including numerous studies identifying the functional role of putative insecticide resistance mutations (Rinkevich et al., 2013), is derived from the oocyte system, and all efforts to achieve the functional expression of insect VGSCs in other systems have so far failed.
The oocyte expression system is particularly well-suited to studies in which channel structure is the principal experimental variable. Expression in oocytes, when coupled with site-directed mutagenesis, also facilitates the testing of specific hypotheses regarding the effects of channel structure on both functional and pharmacological properties and the role of specific domains and amino acid residues in drug and insecticide binding to the channel.
Despite its considerable strengths the oocyte system also possesses two limitations that are intrinsic to the biology of the oocyte itself (Goldin, 2006). First, the biochemistry of post-translational modification is specific to the amphibian oocyte and therefore may differ markedly from both the processing of proteins that normally reside in the membranes of mammalian or insect neurons. Second, the large cell surface area and yolk of the oocyte provide a significant sink for lipophilic compounds such as pyrethroids. As a result, oocytes continue to accumulate pyrethroid during perfusion for up to 3 hours (Harrill et al., 2005); thus, nominal pyrethroid concentrations in the perfusion medium may not reach equilibrium during an experiment and also may not reflect the concentrations available to bind to expressed sodium channels. However, we found that the extent sodium channel modification by pyrethroids reached an apparent equilibrium after perfusion for 20 min (Choi and Soderlund, 2006), suggesting that a portion of the oocyte burden of pyrethroid is not accessible to channels that are expressed in the cell membrane. Nevertheless, the experimental benefits afforded by the oocyte system must be balanced against the uncertain extent to which the results obtained accurately reflect the properties of the same channels in their native neuronal environment.
Action of pyrethroids on rat Nav1.6 sodium channels
We expressed the rat Nav1.6 α subunit with the rat β1 and β2 subunits to give a channel complex in oocytes that reflected the inferred composition of the most abundant CNS complex and assessed the action of S-bioallethrin, tefluthrin and deltamethrin on sodium currents under voltage-clamp conditions (Tan and Soderlund, 2010). We assessed channel modification in the resting state by equilibrating oocytes with a high concentration of pyrethroid in perfusion medium and measuring the pyrethroid-modified current during the first depolarizing pulse. The effects of tefluthrin (100 µM, Fig. 1A) illustrate typical pyrethroid effects: a slowing of inactivation during depolarization, evident as the broadening and incomplete decay of the peak transient sodium current; and, slowing of deactivation, evident as a sodium tail current visible following repolarization.
The gating kinetics of pyrethroid-modified channels varied with the compound employed. Figure 1B illustrates the sodium tail currents produced by S-bioallethrin (rapid decay), tefluthrin (intermediate decay), and deltamethrin (slow decay). In contrast to their strong effects on channel kinetics, the three pyrethroids had little detectable effect on the voltage dependence of channel activation (Fig. 1C) or steady-state inactivation (Fig. 1D). However, all three pyrethroids caused a small but statistically-significant increase in the fraction of channels that were refractory to inactivation following strong depolarizations (see Fig. 1D).
Modification of both insect and mammalian VGSCs expressed in Xenopus oocytes is enhanced by repeated depolarization (Soderlund, 2010). We therefore assessed the use-dependent modification rat Nav1.6 channel complexes by examining the impact of trains of up to 100 brief, high-frequency depolarizations on the extent of channel modification by S-bioallethrin, tefluthrin and deltamethrin in a subsequent test depolarization of normal duration (Tan and Soderlund, 2010). Repeated depolarization strongly enhanced channel modification by tefluthrin, increasing the amplitude of the tail current (Fig. 2A). Experiments with a range of tefluthrin concentrations showed that repeated depolarization increased its apparent potency by more than 10-fold (Fig. 2B). Repeated depolarization also increased the extent of channel modification by deltamethrin but had no effect on channel modification by S-bioallethrin (Fig. 2C). Experiments comparing Nav1.6 α subunits expressed alone or in combination with the β1 and β2 subunits, either singly or in combination, showed that the β1 subunit was required to observe the use-dependent component of Nav1.6 channel modification by tefluthrin (Fig. 2D).
Rat Nav1.6 Sodium Channels Expressed in HEK293 Cells
The HEK293 cell expression system
HEK293 cells were derived from human embryonic kidney cells by transformation with sheared adenovirus type 5 DNA (Graham et al., 1977). HEK293 cells and various subclones derived from them have been employed extensively as a platform for the transient or stable heterologous expression of neuroreceptor and ion channel proteins (Thomas and Smart, 2005). Despite their putative origin in embryonic kidney tissue, HEK293 cells exhibit some characteristics of neurons. They express more than 60 neuronal genes including neurofilament proteins and neuroreceptor and ion channel subunits (Shaw et al., 2002; Thomas and Smart, 2005), and electrophysiological studies confirm the functional expression of endogenous voltage-gated calcium and potassium channels (Berjulow et al., 1996; Jiang et al., 2002). Moreover, studies in this laboratory identified a small TTX-sensitive sodium current in HEK293 cells that was associated primarily with the expression of the human Nav1.7 sodium channel isoform (He and Soderlund, 2010).
As a system for the heterologous expression of mammalian VGSCs, HEK293 cells avoid the problematic aspects of oocyte biology that limit the utility of the Xenopus oocyte system. The stable transformation and clonal selection of HEK293 cells provide immortalized cell lines expressing high levels of specific ion channel subunit combinations. These cell lines facilitate detailed pharmacological studies and are suitable biological substrates for high-throughput screening against ion channel targets. The principal limitation of HEK293 cells for the study of mammalian VGSCs lies in their endogenous expression, albeit at low levels, of sodium channel subunits and voltage-gated sodium currents. This problem can be overcome by a high level of heterologous expression, so that large whole-cell sodium currents recorded from transformed cells can be reliably attributed to the channels formed by heterologous expression of exogenous subunits.
Action of pyrethroids on rat Nav1.6 sodium channels
Figure 3 summarizes the action of tefluthrin and deltamethrin on Nav1.6+β1+β2 sodium channels expressed in HEK293 cells (He and Soderlund, 2011). Both insecticides caused persistent sodium currents during and after a depolarizing pulse (Fig. 3A and 3B). Whereas tefluthrin-induced currents decayed slowly (Fig. 3A), deltamethrin-induced currents did not exhibit any detectable decay (Fig. 3B). In contrast to their modification of Nav1.6+β1+β2 sodium channels expressed in oocytes, both tefluthrin (Fig. 3C) and deltamethrin (Fig. 3D) shifted the voltage dependence of both activation and steady-state inactivation to more hyperpolarized potentials. Both insecticides also created subpopulations of channels that were resistant to inactivation following very strong depolarizations. The impact of both insecticides on voltage-dependent activation and steady-state inactivation significantly enhanced sodium window currents. Thus, both pyrethroids, but especially tefluthrin, increased the probability of channel opening across a wide range of membrane potentials at which unmodified channels were refractory to activation.
We explored the impact of the auxiliary β subunits on Nav1.6 channel modification by tefluthrin and deltamethrin by comparing the action of these insecticides on Nav1.6, Nav1.6+β1, or Nav1.6+β1+β2 channels (He and Soderlund, 2011; He and Soderlund, 2016) Coexpression with β subunits exerted opposite effects on the shifts in voltage-dependent gating of Nav1.6 channels caused by tefluthrin and deltamethrin. The β1 subunit increased the magnitude of the tefluthrin-dependent hyperpolarizing shifts in both activation (Fig. 4A) and steady-state inactivation (Fig. 4B) by approximately 1.5-fold, but the addition of the β2 subunit to form a ternary complex had no additional effect. In contrast to these results, coexpression with the β subunits decreased the magnitude of deltamethrin-dependent hyperpolarizing shifts in activation and steady-state inactivation (Fig. 4A and 4B). Coexpression with the β1 subunit also significantly increased the magnitude of the fraction of the tefluthrin-modified current that was resistant to inactivation at all tefluthrin concentrations examined (Fig. 4C) but had no effect on the magnitude of the inactivation-resistant component of the deltamethrin-modified current (not shown). Thus the opposite effects of coexpression with the β subunits on the voltage-dependent gating of tefluthrin- or deltamethrin modified channels contributed to the differences observed in the relative magnitudes of tefluthrin- and deltamethrin-induced window currents in assays with Nav1.6+β1+β2 channels (see Fig. 3C and 3D).
The importance of use-dependent channel modification in the action of pyrethroids on both insect and mammalian channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes led us to examine use-dependent modification of rat Nav1.6 channels expressed in HEK293 cells and the impact of coexpression with the β1 and β2 subunits on use-dependent modification (He and Soderlund, 2011; He and Soderlund, 2016). In the HEK293 cell system the action of deltamethrin was enhanced by more than two-fold by repetitive depolarization, whereas the action of tefluthrin was unaffected (Fig. 5A). Comparison of the action of deltamethrin on Nav1.6, Nav1.6+β1, or Nav1.6+β1+β2 channels showed that use-dependent enhancement of modification required the presence of the β2 subunit in a heterotrimeric complex (Fig. 5B). It is possible that the β2 subunit alone is sufficient to confer use-dependent enhancement of modification by deltamethrin. However, we did not investigate this effect because there is no evidence for that sodium channels in neurons exist as α+β2 heterodimers.
Conclusions
Effects of cellular expression context on Nav1.6 channel modification by pyrethroids
Our studies of the action of tefluthrin and deltamethrin on rat Nav1.6+β1+β2 channels expressed either in Xenopus oocytes (Tan and Soderlund, 2010) or HEK293 cells (He and Soderlund, 2011) provide an unique opportunity to assess the impact of the cellular context for heterologous expression on the properties of pyrethroid-modified channels. These studies employed identical sodium channel subunit sequences and sodium channel complex compositions as well as comparable experimental approaches to assess channel function and pyrethroid modification. Differences in the pharmacological properties of tefluthrin and deltamethrin in assays with Xenopus oocytes and HEK293 cells can therefore be reliably attributed to the cellular context in which these channels were expressed.
Our studies focused on three aspects of channel modification by pyrethroids: alteration of channel kinetics; effects on voltage-dependent gating; and, the relative significance of resting and use-dependent (i.e., open channel) modification. In both expression systems, tefluthrin and deltamethrin produced sodium currents with prolonged inactivation and deactivation kinetics. These modified currents are the hallmarks of pyrethroid action in native neurons and heterologous expression systems. In both systems, deltamethrin-induced currents were more persistent than tefluthrin-produced currents, but currents induced by both compounds were more persistent in assays using HEK293 cells than in assays using Xenopus oocytes.
In contrast to the similarity between expression systems in the kinetics of pyrethroid-modified Nav1.6 sodium channels, we identified marked differences between these systems in the impact of pyrethroids on voltage-dependent gating. Neither tefluthrin nor deltamethrin had a significant effect on the voltage dependence of channel activation or steady-state fast inactivation in the oocyte system; the only detectable effect was a small increase in the fraction of current that was refractory to inactivation following strong depolarizations. In HEK293 cells, unlike in oocytes, both pyrethroids caused substantial hyperpolarizing shifts in the voltage dependence of both activation and steady-state inactivation and also caused a large fraction of channels (up to 30% in the case of 100 µM tefluthrin; see Fig. 4C) to be resistant to voltage-dependent inactivation. The combined effects of pyrethroids on channel activation and inactivation in HEK293 cells produced large window currents, which describe an enhanced probability of persistent channel opening at membrane potentials at which unmodified channels are either closed or inactivated. Thus, in HEK293 cells tefluthrin and deltamethrin function as persistent activators of sodium channels in addition to their effects on the kinetics of channel inactivation and deactivation, but such effects are not observed for the same pyrethroid - channel combinations assayed in the Xenopus oocyte system.
The relative importance of resting and use-dependent modification of rat Nav1.6 sodium channels by pyrethroids also differed between expression systems. In oocytes, modification of Nav1.6 channels by deltamethrin required repetitive depolarization, indicating that this compound binds almost exclusively to open Nav1.6 channels in this system. Tefluthrin produced readily detectable modification of resting Nav1.6 channels, but repetitive depolarization significantly enhanced the extent of modification, increasing the apparent affinity of channels for this compound by ~15-fold. This result indicates that tefluthrin binds to both resting and open Nav1.6 channels but exhibits preference for binding to the open state. In contrast to the results obtained in oocytes, both tefluthrin and deltamethrin produced detectable resting modification of Nav1.6 channels expressed in HEK293 cells, but only in the case of deltamethrin was modification further enhanced by repeated depolarization. Based on results with these two pyrethroids, it appears that Nav1.6 channels expressed in oocytes exhibit a preference for open-state modification, whereas the same channels expressed in HEK293 cells may undergo more extensive modification in the resting state.
Modulation of pyrethroid action by β subunits
Indirect evidence suggests that Nav1.6 sodium channels in the rat CNS exist predominantly as heterotrimeric complexes with the auxiliary β1 and β2 subunits. Our studies of rat Nav1.6 sodium channels expressed either alone or in heteromultimeric complexes with the β subunits provide insight into the ways in which the auxiliary subunits shape pyrethroid action and the influence of cellular expression context on those effects.
In oocytes coexpression with β subunits, and in particular the β1 subunit, was necessary for use-dependent modification by tefluthrin. Neither Nav1.6 channels nor Nav1.6+β2 channels exhibited enhanced modification upon repeated depolarization, and inclusion of the β2 subunit in Nav1.6+β1+β2 channel complexes did not further modify the effects of the β1 subunit. This effect is not limited to Nav1.6 sodium channels; the rat Nav1.3 sodium channel isoform also did not exhibit use-dependent enhancement of modification by tefluthrin unless expressed with the β1 and β2 subunits (Tan and Soderlund, 2011b). In HEK293 cells coexpression with β subunits was also required to observe use-dependent enhancement of the modification of Nav1.6 sodium channels by deltamethrin. In this case, however, use-dependent effects required the presence of the β2 subunit in Nav1.6+β1+β2 channel complexes whereas coexpression with only the β1 subunit did not confer use-dependent effects. The mechanism by which auxiliary β subunits indirectly facilitate binding of some pyrethroids to pyrethroid receptor domains on the open state of sodium channel α subunits remains to be determined.
In addition to effects on use-dependent modification, assays in the HEK293 cell system revealed substantial and compound-specific effects of β subunits on voltage-dependent gating that were not observed in the Xenopus oocyte system. Coexpression of Nav1.6 channels with the β subunits increased the magnitude of tefluthrin-dependent hyperpolarizing shifts in the voltage dependence of activation and steady-state inactivation but decreased the magnitude of the hyperpolarizing shifts in activation and steady-state inactivation caused by deltamethrin. Coexpression with β1 subunit also increased the fraction of tefluthrin-modified Nav1.6 channels that were resistant to inactivation but had no corresponding effect on deltamethrin-modified channels.
Taken together, our results identify important but unpredictable effects of auxiliary β subunits on the pharmacology of pyrethroid action on VGSCs. The effects of β subunits vary depending on cellular expression context, and also vary depending on the pyrethroid examined. These results underscore the need to reconstitute complete sodium channel complexes to accurately assess channel modification by pyrethroids.
Heterologous expression systems as neuron surrogates
The ultimate value of heterologous expression systems depends on their ability to mimic the functional and pharmacological properties of VGSCs in their native neuronal environment. It is therefore important to ask how pyrethroid action on mammalian VGSCs expressed either in Xenopus oocytes or HEK293 cells compares to the action of pyrethroids on neuronal sodium channels. There are surprisingly few studies available in the literature of the action of pyrethroids on VGSCs in mammalian neurons. However, the principal features of pyrethroid action on Nav1.6 channels expressed in HEK293 cells, including the large shifts in voltage-dependent gating that are not observed for the same channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes, are largely consistent with the action of pyrethroids on sodium channels in mammalian neurons (Tatebayashi and Narahashi, 1994; Tabarean and Narahashi, 1998; Wu et al., 2009). Thus, our data suggest that the HEK293 cell system is a more appropriate model than the Xenopus oocyte system for studies of pyrethroid action on mammalian VGSCs.
Research Highlights.
Mammalian neurons express multiple sodium channel subunit complexes.
Reconstitution in vitro allows the study of individual subunits and complexes.
Xenopus oocytes and HEK293 yield channels with different properties.
Channels in HEK293 cells exhibit properties similar to channels in neurons.
Acknowledgments
This work was supported in part by a grant (R01-ES013686) from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health. The contents of this paper are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
Footnotes
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This paper is based on a contribution to the symposium “Insecticide Action on Ion Channels: A Tribute to Toshio Narahashi” in the Division of Agrochemicals at the 250th American Chemical Society National Meeting on August 16, 2015.
Conflict of Interest Statement
The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest with regard to sources of funding for this research or the design and interpretation of the experiments described herein.
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