Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry
-
Amide-type pipecoloxylidide local anesthetics, bupivacaine, and ropivacaine, show cardiotoxic effects with the potency depending on stereostructures. Cardiotoxic drugs not only bind to cardiomyocyte membrane channels to block them but also modify the physicochemical property of membrane lipid bilayers in which channels are embedded. The opposite configurations allow enantiomers to be discriminated by their enantiospecific interactions with another chiral molecule in membranes. ⋯ The rank order of membrane interactivity agreed with that of known cardiotoxicity. The stereoselective membrane interactions determined by cholesterol with higher chirality appears to be associated with the stereoselective cardiotoxic effects of local anesthetics. The stereostructure and membrane interactivity relationship supports the clinical use and development of S(-)-enantiomers to decrease the adverse effects of pipecoloxylidide local anesthetics on the cardiovascular system.