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1.
The antagonizing action of hydrostatic pressure against anesthesia is well known. The present study was undertaken to quantitate the effects of hydrostatic pressure and anesthetics upon the phase-transition temperature of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine vesicles. The drugs used to anesthetize the phospholipid vesicles included an inhalation anesthetic, halothane, a dissociable local anesthetic, lidocaine and an undissociable local anesthetic, benzyl alcohol. All anesthetics decreased the phase-transition temperature dose-dependently. In the case of lidocaine, the depression was pH dependent and only uncharged molecules were effective. The application of hydrostatic pressure increased the phase-transition temperature both in the presence and the absence of anesthetics. The temperature-pressure relationship was linear over the entire pressure range studied up to 340 bars. Through the use of Clapeyron-Clausius equation, the volume change accompanying the phase-transition of the membrane was calculated to be 27.0 cm3/mol. Although the anesthetics decreased the phase-transition temperature, the molar volume change accompanying the phase-transition was not altered. The anesthetics displaced the temperature-pressure lines parallel to each other. The mole fraction of the anesthetics in the liquid crystalline membrane, calculated from the van't Hoff equation, was independent of pressure. This implies that pressure does not displace the anesthetics from the liquid membrane, and the partition of these agents remains constant. The volume change of the anesthetized phospholipid membranes is entirely dependent upon the phase-transition and not on the space occupied by the anesthetics.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

Local anesthetics are used clinically for peripheral nerve blocks, epidural anesthesia, spinal anesthesia and pain management; large concentrations, continuous application and long exposure time can cause neurotoxicity. The mechanism of neurotoxicity caused by local anesthetics is unclear. Neurite outgrowth and apoptosis can be used to evaluate neurotoxic effects. Mouse neuroblastoma cells were induced to differentiate and generate neurites in the presence of local anesthetics. The culture medium was removed and replaced with serum-free medium plus 20 μl combinations of epidermal growth factor and fibroblast growth factor containing tetracaine, prilocaine, lidocaine or procaine at concentrations of 1, 10, 25, or 100 μl prior to neurite measurement. Cell viability, iNOS, eNOS and apoptosis were evaluated. Local anesthetics produced toxic effects by neurite inhibition at low concentrations and by apoptosis at high concentrations. There was an inverse relation between local anesthetic concentrations and cell viability. Comparison of different local anesthetics showed toxicity, as assessed by cell viability and apoptotic potency, in the following order: tetracaine > prilocaine > lidocaine > procaine. Procaine was the least neurotoxic local anesthetic and because it is short-acting, may be preferred for pain prevention during short procedures.  相似文献   

3.
Detergent-solubilized dimeric and monomeric cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) have significantly different quaternary stability when exposed to 2-3 kbar of hydrostatic pressure. Dimeric, dodecyl maltoside-solubilized cytochrome c oxidase is very resistant to elevated hydrostatic pressure with almost no perturbation of its quaternary structure or functional activity after release of pressure. In contrast to the stability of dimeric CcO, 3 kbar of hydrostatic pressure triggers multiple structural and functional alterations within monomeric cytochrome c oxidase. The perturbations are either irreversible or slowly reversible since they persist after the release of high pressure. Therefore, standard biochemical analytical procedures could be used to quantify the pressure-induced changes after the release of hydrostatic pressure. The electron transport activity of monomeric cytochrome c oxidase decreases by as much as 60% after exposure to 3 kbar of hydrostatic pressure. The irreversible loss of activity occurs in a time- and pressure-dependent manner. Coincident with the activity loss is a sequential dissociation of four subunits as detected by sedimentation velocity, high-performance ion-exchange chromatography, and reversed-phase and SDS-PAGE subunit analysis. Subunits VIa and VIb are the first to dissociate followed by subunits III and VIIa. Removal of subunits VIa and VIb prior to pressurization makes the resulting 11-subunit form of CcO even more sensitive to elevated hydrostatic pressure than monomeric CcO containing all 13 subunits. However, dimeric CcO, in which the association of VIa and VIb is stabilized, is not susceptible to pressure-induced inactivation. We conclude that dissociation of subunit III and/or VIIa must be responsible for pressure-induced inactivation of CcO since VIa and VIb can be removed from monomeric CcO without significant activity loss. These results are the first to clearly demonstrate an important structural role for the dimeric form of cytochrome c oxidase, i.e., stabilization of its quaternary structure.  相似文献   

4.
General anesthesia is characterized by reversible loss of consciousness accompanied by transient amnesia. Yet, long-term memory impairment is an undesirable side effect. How different types of general anesthetics (GAs) affect the hippocampus, a brain region central to memory formation and consolidation, is poorly understood. Using extracellular recordings, chronic 2-photon imaging, and behavioral analysis, we monitor the effects of isoflurane (Iso), medetomidine/midazolam/fentanyl (MMF), and ketamine/xylazine (Keta/Xyl) on network activity and structural spine dynamics in the hippocampal CA1 area of adult mice. GAs robustly reduced spiking activity, decorrelated cellular ensembles, albeit with distinct activity signatures, and altered spine dynamics. CA1 network activity under all 3 anesthetics was different to natural sleep. Iso anesthesia most closely resembled unperturbed activity during wakefulness and sleep, and network alterations recovered more readily than with Keta/Xyl and MMF. Correspondingly, memory consolidation was impaired after exposure to Keta/Xyl and MMF, but not Iso. Thus, different anesthetics distinctly alter hippocampal network dynamics, synaptic connectivity, and memory consolidation, with implications for GA strategy appraisal in animal research and clinical settings.

Amnesia is a central part of the 200 million general anesthesia that are administered worldwide every year, but it is unclear how it affects the hippocampus. This mouse study explores how three commonly used anesthetics influence cellular network activity, spine dynamics and memory consolidation, finding that each of the three anesthetics alters the local field potential, spiking activity and cellular calcium dynamics in a unique way, and they all impact long-term spine dynamics.  相似文献   

5.
Computer simulations of four lipid membranes of different compositions, namely neat DPPC and PSM, and equimolar DPPC-cholesterol and PSM-cholesterol mixtures, are performed in the presence and absence of the general anesthetics diethylether and sevoflurane both at 1 and 600 bar. The results are analyzed in order to identify membrane properties that are potentially related to the molecular mechanism of anesthesia, namely that change in the same way in any membrane with any anesthetics, and change oppositely with increasing pressure. We find that the lateral lipid density satisfies both criteria: it is decreased by anesthetics and increased by pressure. This anesthetic-induced swelling is attributed to only those anesthetic molecules that are located close to the boundary of the apolar phase. This lateral expansion is found to lead to increased lateral mobility of the lipids, an effect often thought to be related to general anesthesia; to an increased fraction of the free volume around the outer preferred position of anesthetics; and to the decrease of the lateral pressure in the nearby range of the ester and amide groups, a region into which anesthetic molecules already cannot penetrate. All these changes are reverted by the increase of pressure. Another important finding of this study is that cholesterol has an opposite effect on the membrane properties than anesthetics, and, correspondingly, these changes are less marked in the presence of cholesterol. Therefore, changes in the membrane that can lead to general anesthesia are expected to occur in the membrane domains of low cholesterol content.  相似文献   

6.
Anesthesia describes a complex state composed of immobility, amnesia, hypnosis (sleep or loss of consciousness), analgesia, and muscle relaxation. Bottom-up approaches explain anesthesia by an interaction of the anesthetic with receptor proteins in the brain, whereas top-down approaches consider predominantly cortical and thalamic network activity and connectivity. Both approaches have a number of explanatory gaps and as yet no unifying view has emerged. In addition to a direct interaction with primary target receptor proteins, general anesthetics have massive effects on neurotransmitter activity in the brain. They can change basal transmitter levels by interacting with neuronal activity, transmitter synthesis, release, reuptake and metabolism. By that way, they can affect a great number of neurotransmitter systems and receptors. Here, we review how different general anesthetics affect extracellular activity of neurotransmitters in the brain during induction, maintenance, and emergence from anesthesia and which functional consequences this may have. Commonalities and differences between different groups of anesthetics in their action on neurotransmitter activity are discussed. We also review how general anesthetics affect the response dynamics of the neurotransmitter systems after sensory stimulation. More than 30 years of research have now yielded a complex picture of the effects of general anesthetics on brain neurotransmitter basal activity and response dynamics. It is suggested that analyzing the effects on neurotransmitter activity is the logical next step after protein interactions in a bottom-up analysis of anesthetic action in the brain on the way to a unifying view of anesthesia.  相似文献   

7.
General anesthetics abolish behavioral responsiveness in all animals, and in humans this is accompanied by loss of consciousness. Whether similar target mechanisms and behavioral endpoints exist across species remains controversial, although model organisms have been successfully used to study mechanisms of anesthesia. In Drosophila, a number of key mutants have been characterized as hypersensitive or resistant to general anesthetics by behavioral assays. In order to investigate general anesthesia in the Drosophila brain, local field potential (LFP) recordings were made during incremental exposures to isoflurane in wild-type and mutant flies. As in higher animals, general anesthesia in flies was found to involve a succession of distinct endpoints. At low doses, isoflurane uncoupled brain activity from ongoing movement, followed by a sudden attenuation in neural correlates of perception. Average LFP activity in the brain was more gradually attenuated with higher doses, followed by loss of movement behavior. Among mutants, a strong correspondence was found between behavioral and LFP sensitivities, thereby suggesting that LFP phenotypes are proximal to the anesthetic's mechanism of action. Finally, genetic and pharmacological analysis revealed that anesthetic sensitivities in the fly brain are, like other arousal states, influenced by dopaminergic activity. These results suggest that volatile anesthetics such as isoflurane may target the same processes that sustain wakefulness and attention in the brain. LFP correlates of general anesthesia in Drosophila provide a powerful new approach to uncovering the nature of these processes.  相似文献   

8.
Normal human dermal fibroblasts were found to survive and to be active in producing interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-8 under extremely high hydrostatic pressure, up to 40 MPa (1 atm=0.101325 MPa=1.03323 kgf/cm(2)), for 20 min. An inhibitor of protein kinase C (PKC) reduced the amount of IL-6 production, whereas IL-8 production was increased following pressure application. The activation of PKC in response to exposure to the pressure stress was detected by using the PKC-specific probe Rim-1. These findings indicate that IL-6 production induced by hydrostatic pressure stresses was dependent on the PKC signaling pathway. In contrast, pressure-induced IL-8 production was inhibited by PKC activity.  相似文献   

9.
This review will focus on the effects of hydrostatic pressure on the oxidative metabolism and on the energy production of the eel Anguilla anguilla, in comparison with the results of investigations conducted on the other powerful euryhaline species, the chinese crab Eriocheir sinensis. Anguilla and Eriocheir were chosen as being both aquatic ectotherms with comparable life modes, the eel being however “preadapted” to high pressure while the crab normally never encounters high levels of pressure during its life cycle. Comparison between both species should lead to better knowledge of the biological effects of hydrostatic pressure per se.Experimental evidence suggests that the oxygen consumption ṀO2 decrease observed in both animal species during exposure to 101 ATA hydrostatic pressure and which follows a transient increase, likely results from a decrease in O2 use at the cell level. That idea of an alteration of aerobic metabolism during the first hours under pressure is substantiated by a set of experiments on the eel. However, results indicate that, after some days under pressure, the shallow water fish is quite able to acclimate perfectly to high pressure. The hypothesis that pressure induces a state resembling histotoxic hypoxia during the first hours of exposure is put forward and discussed.The second part of the review focuses on some results showing that osmoregulation is also concerned with hydrostatic pressure. Results obtained on the freshwater eel clearly establish the occurrence of a Na+ balance impairment at the tissue level induced by a long-term (30 days) exposure to pressure. It is interesting to point out that this impairment occurs at the same time when a new state of energetic metabolism results from adjustments of intertissue coupling of anaerobic and aerobic metabolisms induced by pressure. It is shown that the physiological processes involved in the control of the hydromineral balance in the chinese crab (which never experiences high-pressure exposure in the course of its life cycle) are outstandingly resistant to pressure by comparison with other crustaceans like the crayfish and the shore crab. Disturbances in hydromineral balance and energetic metabolism in the chinese crab are rapidly resorbed and adjusted to a new state of activity.  相似文献   

10.
Poly(L-lysine) exists in a random-coil formation at a low pH, alpha-helix at a pH above 10.6, and transforms into beta-sheet when the alpha-helix polylysine is heated. Each conformation is clearly distinguishable in the amide-I band of the infrared spectrum. The thermotropic alpha-to-beta transition was studied by using differential scanning calorimetry. At pH 10.6, the transition temperature was 43.5 degrees C and the transition enthalpy was 170 cal/mol residue. At pH 11.85, the measurements were 36.7 degrees C and 910 cal/mol residue, respectively. Volatile anesthetics (chloroform, halothane, isoflurane and enflurane) partially transformed alpha-helix polylysine into beta-sheet. The transformation was reversed by the application of hydrostatic pressure in the range of 100-350 atm. Apparently, the alpha-to-beta transition was induced by anesthetics through partial dehydration of the peptide side-chains (beta-sheet surface is less hydrated than alpha-helix). High pressure reversed this process by re-hydrating the peptide. Because the membrane spanning domains of channel and receptor proteins are predominantly in the alpha-helix conformation, anesthetics may suppress the activity of excitable cells by transforming them into a less than optimal structure for electrogenic ion transport and neurotransmission. Proteins and lipid membranes maintain their structural integrity by interaction with water. That which attenuates the interaction will destabilize the structure. These data suggest that anesthetics alter macromolecular conformations essentially by a solvent effect, thereby destroying the solvation water shell surrounding macromolecules.  相似文献   

11.
We have investigated the effect of high hydrostatic pressure on MscS, the bacterial mechanosensitive channel of small conductance. Pressure affected channel kinetics but not conductance. At negative pipette voltages (corresponding to membrane depolarization in the inside-out patch configuration used in our experiments) the channel exhibited a reversible reduction in activity with increasing hydrostatic pressure between 0 and 900 atm (90 MPa) at 23°C. The reduced activity was characterized by a significant reduction in the channel opening probability resulting from a shortening of the channel openings with increasing pressure. Thus high hydrostatic pressure generally favoured channel closing. Cooling the patch by approximately 10°C, intended to order the bilayer component of the patch by an amount similar to that caused by 50 MPa at 23°C, had relatively little effect. This implies that pressure does not affect channel kinetics via bilayer order. Accordingly we postulate that lateral compression of the bilayer, under high hydrostatic pressure, is responsible. These observations also have implications for our understanding of the adaptation of mechanosensitive channels in deep-sea bacteria.A Proceeding of the 28th Annual Meeting of the Australian Society for Biophysics.  相似文献   

12.
General anesthetics are known to cause depression of the freezing point of transitions in biomembranes. This is a consequence of ideal mixing of the anesthetic drugs in the membrane fluid phase and exclusion from the solid phase. Such a generic law provides physical justification of the famous Meyer-Overton rule. We show here that general anesthetics, barbiturates, and local anesthetics all display the same effect on melting transitions. Their effect is reversed by hydrostatic pressure. Thus, the thermodynamic behavior of local anesthetics is very similar to that of general anesthetics. We present a detailed thermodynamic analysis of heat capacity profiles of membranes in the presence of anesthetics. Using this analysis, we are able to describe experimentally observed calorimetric profiles and predict the anesthetic features of arbitrary molecules. In addition, we discuss the thermodynamic origin of the cutoff effect of long-chain alcohols and the additivity of the effect of general and local anesthetics.  相似文献   

13.
General anesthetics are known to cause depression of the freezing point of transitions in biomembranes. This is a consequence of ideal mixing of the anesthetic drugs in the membrane fluid phase and exclusion from the solid phase. Such a generic law provides physical justification of the famous Meyer-Overton rule. We show here that general anesthetics, barbiturates, and local anesthetics all display the same effect on melting transitions. Their effect is reversed by hydrostatic pressure. Thus, the thermodynamic behavior of local anesthetics is very similar to that of general anesthetics. We present a detailed thermodynamic analysis of heat capacity profiles of membranes in the presence of anesthetics. Using this analysis, we are able to describe experimentally observed calorimetric profiles and predict the anesthetic features of arbitrary molecules. In addition, we discuss the thermodynamic origin of the cutoff effect of long-chain alcohols and the additivity of the effect of general and local anesthetics.  相似文献   

14.
The facultative piezophile Shewanella violacea DSS12 is known to alter its respiratory components under the influence of hydrostatic pressure during growth, suggesting that it has a respiratory system that functions in adaptation to high pressure. We investigated the pressure- and temperature-dependencies of the respiratory terminal oxidase activity of the membrane of S. violacea relative to non-piezophilic Shewanella species. We observed that the activity in the membrane of S. violacea was more resistant to high pressure than those of non-piezophilic Shewanella even though DSS12 was cultured under atmospheric pressure. On the other hand, the temperature dependency of this activity was almost the same for all of the tested strain regardless of optimal growth temperature. Both high pressure and low temperature are expected to lower protein flexibility, causing a decrease in enzyme activity, but the results of this study suggest that the mechanism maintaining enzyme activity under high hydrostatic pressure is different from that at low temperature. Additionally, the responses of the activity to the pressure- and temperature-changes were independent of membrane lipid composition. Therefore, the piezotolerance of the respiratory terminal oxidases of S. violacea is perhaps dependent on the properties of the protein itself and not on the lipid composition of the membrane. Our observations suggest that S. violacea constitutively express piezotolerant respiratory terminal oxidases that serve adaptation to the deep-sea environment.  相似文献   

15.
M A Akeson  D W Deamer 《Biochemistry》1989,28(12):5120-5127
The molecular mechanism of general anesthesia is not understood. Possible modes of action include binding at a protein site, such as a receptor or channel, or physical effects on membrane lipid properties. The pump-leak hypothesis suggests that anesthetics perturb the bilayer of synaptic vesicles, thereby increasing ionic permeability. This results in decay of proton gradients required for transport and accumulation of neurotransmitters. The subsequent loss of neurotransmitters from synaptic vesicles reduces the efficiency of synaptic transmission and results in the anesthetized state. We have determined the effects of general anesthetics on certain parameters of enzyme activity and membrane permeability relevant to the pump-leak hypothesis. We used chromaffin granules as a convenient model system and focused on clinically relevant anesthetic concentrations (ED50), quantitative measurements of permeability changes, and the kinetics of gradient decay. General anesthetics at ED50 have little or no effect on the proton-transport ATPase activity, but do cause modest increments in proton permeability that change the catecholamine distribution in actively pumping chromaffin granule preparations. We found that pH gradients do not collapse entirely under these conditions and that only a fraction of total catecholamine is lost from the chromaffin granules. When total collapse is induced by other means, efflux of catecholamines occurs with a half-time near 30 min. These results suggest that if the pump-leak hypothesis is valid, then very small losses of catecholamines must be sufficient to induce anesthesia. We conclude that the weight of evidence favors other mechanisms, notably direct binding of anesthetics to sensitive proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Pea seeds were soaked in distilled water or in saturated D-mannitol solution either under normal or under high external pressures (10-30 atms.) for approximately 24 hours. Imbibition in distilled water was independent of the hydrostatic pressure. However, imbibition in D-mannitol solution was enhanced by the pressure. It was concluded that hydrostatic pressure caused by turgor could enhance imbibition of the protoplast. Under high turgor, the protoplast may swell even at a high osmotic potential. Turgor seems to be of importance for the physiological activity of the plant cell.  相似文献   

17.
Disruption of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) results in cerebral edema formation, which is a major cause for high mortality after traumatic brain injury (TBI). As anesthetic care is mandatory in patients suffering from severe TBI it may be important to elucidate the effect of different anesthetics on cerebral edema formation. Tight junction proteins (TJ) such as zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1) and claudin-5 (cl5) play a central role for BBB stability. First, the influence of the volatile anesthetics sevoflurane and isoflurane on in-vitro BBB integrity was investigated by quantification of the electrical resistance (TEER) in murine brain endothelial monolayers and neurovascular co-cultures of the BBB. Secondly brain edema and TJ expression of ZO-1 and cl5 were measured in-vivo after exposure towards volatile anesthetics in native mice and after controlled cortical impact (CCI). In in-vitro endothelial monocultures, both anesthetics significantly reduced TEER within 24 hours after exposure. In BBB co-cultures mimicking the neurovascular unit (NVU) volatile anesthetics had no impact on TEER. In healthy mice, anesthesia did not influence brain water content and TJ expression, while 24 hours after CCI brain water content increased significantly stronger with isoflurane compared to sevoflurane. In line with the brain edema data, ZO-1 expression was significantly higher in sevoflurane compared to isoflurane exposed CCI animals. Immunohistochemical analyses revealed disruption of ZO-1 at the cerebrovascular level, while cl5 was less affected in the pericontusional area. The study demonstrates that anesthetics influence brain edema formation after experimental TBI. This effect may be attributed to modulation of BBB permeability by differential TJ protein expression. Therefore, selection of anesthetics may influence the barrier function and introduce a strong bias in experimental research on pathophysiology of BBB dysfunction. Future research is required to investigate adverse or beneficial effects of volatile anesthetics on patients at risk for cerebral edema.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Experience-driven activity plays an essential role in the development of brain circuitry during critical periods of early postnatal life, a process that depends upon a dynamic balance between excitatory and inhibitory signals. Since general anesthetics are powerful pharmacological modulators of neuronal activity, an important question is whether and how these drugs can affect the development of synaptic networks. To address this issue, we examined here the impact of anesthetics on synapse growth and dynamics. We show that exposure of young rodents to anesthetics that either enhance GABAergic inhibition or block NMDA receptors rapidly induce a significant increase in dendritic spine density in the somatosensory cortex and hippocampus. This effect is developmentally regulated; it is transient but lasts for several days and is also reproduced by selective antagonists of excitatory receptors. Analyses of spine dynamics in hippocampal slice cultures reveals that this effect is mediated through an increased rate of protrusions formation, a better stabilization of newly formed spines, and leads to the formation of functional synapses. Altogether, these findings point to anesthesia as an important modulator of spine dynamics in the developing brain and suggest the existence of a homeostatic process regulating spine formation as a function of neural activity. Importantly, they also raise concern about the potential impact of these drugs on human practice, when applied during critical periods of development in infants.  相似文献   

20.
Because the mechanism of anesthesia is unknown, the relationship between anesthetics and enzymes essential to brain function may be an important one. Therefore, the effect of 8 volatile anesthetics on the enzymatic activity of solubilized, purified dog brain and human erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and human serum cholinesterase (ChE) was studied in vitro. Serum ChE was found to be insensitive to saturated solutions of all the anesthetics studied. However, brain and erythrocyte AChE were reversibly inhibited in a dose-dependent manner by all 8 anesthetics in concentrations exceeding those used in clinical practice. Kinetic analysis revealed a mixed (competitive, non-competitive) type of inhibition with the exception of the ether-crythrocyte AChE interaction which was characterized by competitive inhibition. Ether and methoxyflurane were found to depress the AChE activity the most and isoflurane and enflurane the least. The concentrations of anesthetic in the gas phase necessary for 50% inhibition of erythrocyte AChE activity (I50) were calculated for 5 anesthetics and found to correlate with their water-gas partition coefficients. These data suggest that the effect in vitro of volatile anesthetics on the catalytic activity of cholinesterases is a variable one and may be unrelated to anesthetic potency in vivo. The implications of these data concerning anesthetic-active site interactions are discussed.  相似文献   

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