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1.
Firefly luciferase is considered a reasonable model of in vivo anesthetic targets despite being destabilized by anesthetics, as reflected by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). We examined the interaction between two inhaled anesthetics, ATP, luciferase, and temperature, using amide hydrogen exchange, tryptophan fluorescence, and photolabeling in an attempt to examine this apparent discrepancy. In the absence of ATP/Mg2+, halothane and bromoform cause destabilization, as measured by hydrogen exchange, suggesting nonspecific interactions. In the presence of ATP/Mg2+ and at room temperature, the anesthetics produce considerable stabilization with a negative DeltaH, indicating population of a conformer with a specific anesthetic binding site. Stabilizing interactions are lost, however, at unfolding temperatures. We suggest that preferential binding to aggregated forms of luciferase explain the higher temperature destabilization detected with DSC. Our results demonstrate a cooperative binding equilibrium between native ligands and anesthetics, suggesting that similar interactions could underlie actions at biologically relevant targets.  相似文献   

2.
Although pentameric ligand-gated ion channels (pLGICs) have been found to be the targets of general anesthetics, the mechanism of the effects of anesthetics on pLGICs remains elusive. pLGICs from Gloeobacter violaceus (GLIC) can be inhibited by the anesthetic ketamine. X-ray crystallography has shown that the ketamine binding site is distant from the channel gate of the GLIC. It is still not clear how ketamine controls the function of the GLIC by long-range allosteric regulation. In this work, the functionally crucial residues and allosteric pathway of anesthetic regulation of the GLIC were identified by use of a coarse-grained thermodynamic method developed by our group. In our method, the functionally crucial sites were identified as the residues thermodynamically coupled with binding of ketamine. The results from calculation were highly consistent with experimental data. Our study aids understanding of the mechanism of the anesthetic action of ketamine on the GLIC by long-range allosteric modulation.  相似文献   

3.
In spite of numerous investigations, the molecular mechanism of general anesthetics action is still not well understood. It has been shown that the anesthetic potency is related to the ability of an anesthetic to partition into the membrane. We have investigated changes in structure, dynamics and forces of interaction in supported dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayers in the presence of the general anesthetic halothane. In the present study, we measured the forces of interaction between the probe and the bilayer using an atomic force microscope. The changes in force curves as a function of anesthetic incorporation were analyzed. Force measurements were in good agreement with AFM imaging data, and provided valuable information on bilayer thickness, structural transitions, and halothane-induced changes in electrostatic and adhesive properties.  相似文献   

4.
In spite of numerous investigations, the molecular mechanism of general anesthetics action is still not well understood. It has been shown that the anesthetic potency is related to the ability of an anesthetic to partition into the membrane. We have investigated changes in structure, dynamics and forces of interaction in supported dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) bilayers in the presence of the general anesthetic halothane. In the present study, we measured the forces of interaction between the probe and the bilayer using an atomic force microscope. The changes in force curves as a function of anesthetic incorporation were analyzed. Force measurements were in good agreement with AFM imaging data, and provided valuable information on bilayer thickness, structural transitions, and halothane-induced changes in electrostatic and adhesive properties.  相似文献   

5.
The molecular basis of anesthetic interaction with membrane proteins has been explored via determination of anesthetic effects on the structure and dynamics of the extended second transmembrane domain (TM2e) of the human neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) β2 subunit in dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelles by 1H and 15N solution-state NMR. Both 1-chloro-1,2,2-trifluorocyclobutane (F3) and isoflurane, two volatile general anesthetics, induced nonuniform changes in chemical shifts among residues in TM2e. Saturation transfer difference NMR experiments further confirmed the direct anesthetic interaction with TM2e. A significant and more specific anesthetic interaction was observed on three leucine residues at the helix C-terminus. Although the TM2e helical structure remained after addition of anesthetics, plausible shortening and lengthening of helix hydrogen bonds were evidenced by periodic changes in backbone amide chemical shifts. The TM2e backbone dynamics were determined on the basis of the 15N relaxation rate constants, R1 and R2, and the 15N-[1H] NOE using the model-free approach. The global tumbling time (11.7 ns) of TM2e in micelles slightly increased (∼12.3-12.5 ns) in the presence of anesthetics. The order parameter, S2, exceeded 0.9 for all 15N-labeled residues, showing a restricted internal motion. Anesthetics appear to have minor effect on the TM2e's internal motion. This study provided the basis for subsequent more comprehensive studies of anesthetic effects on the transmembrane domain complex of neuronal nAChR.  相似文献   

6.
Recently (Franks, N.P. and Lieb, W.R. (1978) Nature 274, 339–342) it has been claimed that the traditional correlation between anesthetic potency and vegetable oil solubility breaks down when the alkanols are compared to other volatile anesthetics. Lately, however, new information on the partitioning of anesthetics into lipid bilayers has become available. In this report the potency of twenty-one structurally diverse anesthetic agents is shown to correlate well with their ability to partition into phosphatidylcholine bilayers. Thus the original Meyer-Overton oil solubility hypothesis accomodates a wider range of anesthetics, including alkanols, volatile and gaseous agents, and barbiturates, when lipid bilayer solubility is substituted for oil solubility.  相似文献   

7.
A large and diverse array of small hydrophobic molecules induce general anesthesia. Their efficacy as anesthetics has been shown to correlate both with their affinity for a hydrophobic environment and with their potency in inhibiting certain ligand-gated ion channels. In this study we explore the effects that n-alcohols and other liquid anesthetics have on the two-dimensional miscibility critical point observed in cell-derived giant plasma membrane vesicles (GPMVs). We show that anesthetics depress the critical temperature (Tc) of these GPMVs without strongly altering the ratio of the two liquid phases found below Tc. The magnitude of this affect is consistent across n-alcohols when their concentration is rescaled by the median anesthetic concentration (AC50) for tadpole anesthesia, but not when plotted against the overall concentration in solution. At AC50 we see a 4°C downward shift in Tc, much larger than is typically seen in the main chain transition at these anesthetic concentrations. GPMV miscibility critical temperatures are also lowered to a similar extent by propofol, phenylethanol, and isopropanol when added at anesthetic concentrations, but not by tetradecanol or 2,6 diterbutylphenol, two structural analogs of general anesthetics that are hydrophobic but have no anesthetic potency. We propose that liquid general anesthetics provide an experimental tool for lowering critical temperatures in plasma membranes of intact cells, which we predict will reduce lipid-mediated heterogeneity in a way that is complimentary to increasing or decreasing cholesterol. Also, several possible implications of our results are discussed in the context of current models of anesthetic action on ligand-gated ion channels.  相似文献   

8.
The molecular site of anesthetic action remains an area of intense research interest. It is not clear whether general anesthetics act through direct binding to proteins or by perturbing the membrane properties of excitable tissues. Several studies indicate that anesthetics affect the properties of either membrane lipids or proteins. However, gaps remain in our understanding of the molecular mechanism of anesthetic action. Recent developments in membrane biology have led to the concept of small-scale domain structures in lipid and lipid--protein coupled systems. The role of such domain structures in anesthetic action has not been studied in detail. In the present study, we investigated the effect of anesthetics on lipid domain structures in model membranes using the fluorescent spectral properties of Laurdan (6-dodecanoyl-2-dimethylamino naphthalene). Propofol, a general anesthetic, promoted the formation of fluid domains in model membranes of dipalmitoyl phosphatidyl choline (DPPC) or mixtures of lipids of varying acyl chains (DPPC:DMPC dimyristoyl phosphatidyl choline 1:1). The estimated size of these domains is 20--50 A. Based on these studies, we speculate that the mechanism of anesthetic action may involve effects on protein--lipid coupled systems through alterations in small-scale lipid domain structures.  相似文献   

9.
The anesthetic-induced depression of the main phase-transition temperature of phospholipid membranes is often analyzed according to the van't Hoff model on the freezing point depression. In this procedure, zero interaction between anesthetics and solid-gel membranes is assumed. Nevertheless, anesthetics bind to solid-gel membranes to a significant degree. It is necessary to analyze the difference in the anesthetic binding between the liquid-crystal and solid-gel membranes to probe the anesthetic action on the lipid membranes. This article describes a theory to estimate the anesthetic binding to each state at the phase-transition temperature. The equations derived here reveal the relation between the partition coefficients of anesthetics and the anesthetic effects on the transition characters: the change in the transition temperature, and the broadening of transition. The theory revealed that the width of transition temperature is determined primarily by the membrane/buffer partition coefficients of anesthetics. Our previous data on the local anesthetic action on the transition temperature of the dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine vesicle membrane (Ueda, I., Tashiro, C. and Arakawa, K. (1977) Anesthesiology 46, 327-332) are analyzed by this method. The numerical values for the partition of local anesthetics into the liquid-crystal and solid-gel dipalmitoyl-phosphatidylcholine vesicle membranes at the phase-transition temperature are: procaine 8.0 x 10(3) and 4.7 x 10(3), lidocaine, 3.7 x 10(3) and 2.3 x 10(3), bupivacaine 4.1 x 10(4), and 2.6 x 10(4), and tetracaine 7.3 x 10(4) and 4.7 x 10(4), respectively.  相似文献   

10.
One major unanswered question in neuroscience is how the brain transitions between conscious and unconscious states. General anesthetics offer a controllable means to study these transitions. Induction of anesthesia is commonly attributed to drug-induced global modulation of neuronal function, while emergence from anesthesia has been thought to occur passively, paralleling elimination of the anesthetic from its sites in the central nervous system (CNS). If this were true, then CNS anesthetic concentrations on induction and emergence would be indistinguishable. By generating anesthetic dose-response data in both insects and mammals, we demonstrate that the forward and reverse paths through which anesthetic-induced unconsciousness arises and dissipates are not identical. Instead they exhibit hysteresis that is not fully explained by pharmacokinetics as previously thought. Single gene mutations that affect sleep-wake states are shown to collapse or widen anesthetic hysteresis without obvious confounding effects on volatile anesthetic uptake, distribution, or metabolism. We propose a fundamental and biologically conserved concept of neural inertia, a tendency of the CNS to resist behavioral state transitions between conscious and unconscious states. We demonstrate that such a barrier separates wakeful and anesthetized states for multiple anesthetics in both flies and mice, and argue that it contributes to the hysteresis observed when the brain transitions between conscious and unconscious states.  相似文献   

11.
Local amine anesthetics appear to exert their effects in the charged (protonated) form on the cytoplasmic side of excitable membranes. Two features of interest are the mechanism whereby these drugs move across the membrane to the inner monolayer and the actual membrane concentrations achieved. In this work, we have investigated the influence of a K+ diffusion potential, delta psi, on the transmembrane distribution and concentration of the local anesthetic dibucaine employing large unilamellar vesicle systems. It is demonstrated that egg phosphatidylcholine large unilamellar vesicles exhibiting a delta psi (interior negative) actively accumulate dibucaine to achieve high interior concentrations. 31P and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance studies show that the internalized drug is localized to the vesicle inner monolayer, and suggest that the protonated form of the anesthetic is the species that is actively transported. The inner monolayer anesthetic concentrations thus achieved can be an order of magnitude or more larger than predicted on the basis of anesthetic lipid-water partition coefficients. It is suggested that these effects may be related to the mechanisms whereby local anesthetics are localized and concentrated at their sites of action in nerve membranes.  相似文献   

12.
Ionic currents of normal and aconitine modified sodium channels of the Ranvier node membrane were measured under voltage clamp conditions. The experiments with local anesthetics in the external Ringer solution have showed that dissociation constant (Kdis) of normal channel-anesthetic complex for procaine is 0.27 + 0.03 mM, and for benzocaine is 0.68 +/- 0.04 mM. With aconitine modified channels, Kdis increases and becomes 1.32 +/- 0.5 mM and 1.52 +/- 0.3 mM for procaine and benzocaine, respectively. It is ascertained that the development of aconitine effect is inhibited by neutral benzocaine to a lesser extent than by procaine. It is shown that the aconitine effect cannot be reversed by a high concentration of anesthetic. Hence, it appears that aconitine and anesthetic receptors do not coincide.  相似文献   

13.
The firefly luciferase enzyme from Photinus pyralis is probably the best-characterized model system for studying anesthetic-protein interactions. It binds a diverse range of general anesthetics over a large potency range, displays a sensitivity to anesthetics that is very similar to that found in animals, and has an anesthetic sensitivity that can be modulated by one of its substrates (ATP). In this paper we describe the properties of bromoform acting as a general anesthetic (in Rana temporaria tadpoles) and as an inhibitor of the firefly luciferase enzyme at high and low ATP concentrations. In addition, we describe the crystal structure of the low-ATP form of the luciferase enzyme in the presence of bromoform at 2.2-A resolution. These results provide a structural basis for understanding the anesthetic inhibition of the enzyme, as well as an explanation for the ATP modulation of its anesthetic sensitivity.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
A number of compounds showing general anesthetic action in the rotifer Brachionus calyciflorus were investigated in the presence of acetylcholine. Non-ionizing anesthetics, including tricaine, showed no interaction with acetylcholine. However, highly ionized compounds like the local anesthetics procaine and lidocaine, the muscarinic blocker and local anesthetic atropine, and the beta-adrenergic blocker propranolol showed a synergistic effect with acetylcholine. ACh increased the general anesthetic effect of these compounds in a statistically highly significant dose-dependent fashion. To account for the mechanism of this unusual and novel effect it is proposed that these compounds interact with the anesthetic binding site of the rotifer cholinoceptor ionophore in the open state. It is also proposed that non-ionizing compounds have a general membrane effect only. In addition to anesthesia, atropine and propranolol cause foot paralysis in B. calyciflorus. This other novel effect is also enhanced by acetylcholine as well as decamethonium, a neuromuscular blocker.  相似文献   

16.
围术期最常用,最重要的药物是全身麻醉药(包括吸入麻醉药和静脉麻醉药),麻醉药是适应手术的需要而出现的,经过长时间的发展,它的药理作用也越来越完善。在过去几年里很多研究报道的麻醉药的药理作用与介导的细胞凋亡之间的关系主要集中在神经系统。然而,麻醉实践中大部分麻醉药物都在肝脏代谢,已有证据表明麻醉药对肝细胞也有影响。麻醉药介导的细胞凋亡作用可能与caspase通路,Bcl-2家族,TRADD,FADD等多种因素有关。但不是所有麻醉药都对肝细胞有凋亡作用,部分还具有保护作用。因此本文就现有的麻醉药对肝细胞凋亡中的作用进行了综述。  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
An assumption is made on the substantial role of local hydrogen bonds in formation of irregular regions of globular protein polypeptide chains. The statistics of the amino acid composition of irregular regions is examined from this point of view. A statistical analysis of side group-backbone hydrogen bonds is carried out for three proteins: alpha-chy-motrypsin, lysozyme and myoglobin. It is shown that short side groups participate in formation of local hydrogen bonds more often than long ones. Conformations of amino acid residues in the first and the last positions are studied in beta-bends of 9 proteins. It is shown that over 70% of these residues are in conformations corresponding to the formation of local hydrogen bonds of three types: backbone-backbone, side groupbackbone, backbone-water molecule-backbone. Thus, the participation of the cooperative hydrogen-bonding network in stabilization of beta-bends is demonstrated.  相似文献   

19.
Rajaram S  Spangler TL  Sedensky MM  Morgan PG 《Genetics》1999,153(4):1673-1682
The mechanism of action of volatile anesthetics is unknown. In Caenorhabditis elegans, mutations in the gene unc-1 alter anesthetic sensitivity. The protein UNC-1 is a close homologue of the mammalian protein stomatin. Mammalian stomatin is thought to interact with an as-yet-unknown ion channel to control sodium flux. Using both reporter constructs and translational fusion constructs for UNC-1 and green fluorescent protein (GFP), we have shown that UNC-1 is expressed primarily within the nervous system. The expression pattern of UNC-1 is similar to that of UNC-8, a sodium channel homologue. We examined the interaction of multiple alleles of unc-1 and unc-8 with each other and with other genes affecting anesthetic sensitivity. The data indicate that the protein products of these genes interact, and that an UNC-1/UNC-8 complex is a possible anesthetic target. We propose that membrane-associated protein complexes may represent a general target for volatile anesthetics.  相似文献   

20.
The α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) has significant roles in nervous system function and disease. It is also a molecular target of general anesthetics. Anesthetics inhibit the α4β2 nAChR at clinically relevant concentrations, but their binding sites in α4β2 remain unclear. The recently determined NMR structures of the α4β2 nAChR transmembrane (TM) domains provide valuable frameworks for identifying the binding sites. In this study, we performed solution NMR experiments on the α4β2 TM domains in the absence and presence of halothane and ketamine. Both anesthetics were found in an intra-subunit cavity near the extracellular end of the β2 transmembrane helices, homologous to a common anesthetic binding site observed in X-ray structures of anesthetic-bound GLIC (Nury et al., [32]). Halothane, but not ketamine, was also found in cavities adjacent to the common anesthetic site at the interface of α4 and β2. In addition, both anesthetics bound to cavities near the ion selectivity filter at the intracellular end of the TM domains. Anesthetic binding induced profound changes in protein conformational exchanges. A number of residues, close to or remote from the binding sites, showed resonance signal splitting from single to double peaks, signifying that anesthetics decreased conformation exchange rates. It was also evident that anesthetics shifted population of two conformations. Altogether, the study comprehensively resolved anesthetic binding sites in the α4β2 nAChR. Furthermore, the study provided compelling experimental evidence of anesthetic-induced changes in protein dynamics, especially near regions of the hydrophobic gate and ion selectivity filter that directly regulate channel functions.  相似文献   

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