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1.
The effect of local anesthetics on the permeability of phospholipid liposomes of different composition for calcein has been investigated. The local anesthetics tested included amides (lidocaine, prilocaine, mepivacaine, and bupivacaine) and esters (benzocaine, procaine, and tetracaine). The permeability of large monolamellar liposomes was assessed by monitoring the fluorescence of calcein leaking from the phospholipid vesicles. All tested amide anesthetics exerted negligible effects on the permeability of dioleylphosphocholine (DOPC) liposomes for the fluorescent marker. The most efficient in this group was did bupivacaine. Amides had a more pronounced effect on membranes in which 20 mol % of DOPC was replaced by tetraoleoylcardiolipin (TOCL). Benzocaine and procaine at concentration up to 100 mM did not affect the permeability of DOPC liposomes. Membrane permeability of DOPC liposomes was not affected by the addition of tetracaine to the final concentration of 2 mM, while the increase of anesthetic concentration up to 50 mM was accompanied by an increase in the intensity of fluorescence of calcein released from the vesicles, and addition of the anesthetic to the concentration of 100 mM caused by complete release of the marker incorporated by the liposomes. The threshold concentration of tetracaine initiating calcein leakage from vesicles that contained 20 mol % TOCL was 7 mM, and the concentration corresponding to 100% calcein leakage was 20 mM. Confocal fluorescence microscopy of giant monolamellar liposomes formed from an equimolar mixture of DOPC and tetramiristoylcardiolipin demonstrated the destruction of solid ordered domains at the presence of anesthetics, and its destructive capacity increasing in the following order: procaine ≈ mepivacaine < bupivacaine ? tetracaine. Variability of the depth of anesthetic incorporation into the membrane may account for the dissimilar effects of local anesthetics on liposomes.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of three local anesthetics, lidocaine, dibucaine, and tetracaine, on Na+/H+ antiporter activity were examined in brush border membrane-reconstituted vesicles. Lidocaine at 10 microM inhibited H+ efflux in the presence of an inward Na+ gradient, suggesting that this anesthetic specifically inhibits the Na+/H+ antiporter. On the other hand, dibucaine and tetracaine decreased H+ efflux even in the absence of a Na+ gradient.  相似文献   

3.
The secondary glycine betaine uptake system BetP of Corynebacterium glutamicum was purified from Escherichia coli membranes in strep-tagged form after heterologous expression of the betP gene and was reconstituted in E. coli lipids. BetP retained its kinetic properties (V(max) and K(m) for betaine and Na(+)) as compared with intact cells. The influence of driving forces (Na(+) gradient and/or electrical potential) on betaine uptake was quantified in proteoliposomes. BetP was effectively regulated by the external osmolality and was stimulated by the local anesthetic tetracaine. A shift of the optimum of osmotic stimulation to higher osmolalities was linearly correlated with an increasing share of phosphatidyl glycerol, the major lipid of the C. glutamicum plasma membrane in the E. coli lipid proteoliposomes. This finding correlates with results demonstrating an identical shift when betP was expressed in E. coli instead of C. glutamicum. These data indicate that (i) BetP comprises all elements of osmosensing and osmoregulatory mechanisms of betaine uptake, (ii) osmoregulation of BetP is directly related to protein/membrane interactions, (iii) the turgor pressure presumably plays no major role in osmoregulation of BetP, and (iv) the regulatory properties of BetP may be related to the physical state of the surrounding membrane.  相似文献   

4.
Although widely used clinically, the mechanism underlying the action of local anesthetics remains elusive. Direct interaction of anesthetics with membrane proteins and modulation of membrane physical properties by anesthetics are plausible mechanisms proposed, although a combination of these two mechanisms cannot be ruled out. In this context, the role of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) in local anesthetic action is a relatively new area of research. We show here that representative tertiary amine local anesthetics induce a reduction in two-dimensional diffusion coefficient of the serotonin1A receptor, an important neurotransmitter GPCR. The corresponding change in mobile fraction is varied, with tetracaine exhibiting the maximum reduction in mobile fraction, whereas the change in mobile fraction for other local anesthetics was not appreciable. These results are supported by quantitation of cellular F-actin, using a confocal microscopic approach previously developed by us, which showed that a pronounced increase in F-actin level was induced by tetracaine. These results provide a novel perspective on the action of local anesthetics in terms of GPCR lateral diffusion and actin cytoskeleton reorganization.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of local anesthetics (tetracaine, procaine and lidocaine) on self-sustained electrical oscillations were studied for a lipid membrane comprising dioleyl phosphate (DOPH). This model membrane exhibits oscillation of the membrane potential in a manner similar to that of nerve membranes, i.e., repetitive firing, in the presence of an ion-concentration gradient, on the application of d.c. electric current. Relatively weak anesthetics such as procaine and lidocaine increased the frequency of self-sustained oscillation, and finally induced aperiodic, rapid oscillation. The strong anesthetic tetracaine inhibited oscillation.  相似文献   

6.
Pharmacological agents are widely used to probe the mechanism of action of TRH. A number of these drugs behave as local anesthetics at high concentrations. The effect of local anesthetics on the binding of [3H]Me-TRH to specific receptors was studied using the GH4C1 line of rat pituitary tumor cells. [3H]Me-TRH binding was inhibited by classical local anesthetics with the order of potency (IC50 values): dibucaine (0.37 mM) greater than tetracaine (1.2 mM) greater than lidocaine (3.3 mM) greater than procaine and benzocaine (greater than 10 mM). IC50 values for other drugs with local anesthetic properties that inhibited [3H]Me-TRH were: 100 microM trifluoperazine, 100 microM imipramine, 170 microM chlorpromazine, 300 microM verapamil, and 700 microM propranolol. Inhibition by tetracaine and verapamil increased as the pH was raised from 6 to 8.5, indicating that the free base form of the amine drugs was the inhibitory species, and the local anesthetic effect was greater at 37 C than at 24 C or 0 C. [3H]Me-TRH binding to receptors in isolated membranes was inhibited to the same extent as binding to receptors on intact cells. Local anesthetics were 3- to 20-fold less potent at inhibiting [3H]Me-TRH to digitonin-solubilized receptors than binding to intact cells. In contrast, the potency of chlordiazepoxide, a putative TRH antagonist, to inhibit [3H]Me-TRH binding was equal using cells and solubilized receptors (IC50 = 10 microM). Local anesthetics inhibited TRH-stimulated PRL release and also inhibited basal PRL secretion and secretion stimulated by two nonhormonal secretagogues, (Bu)2cAMP and a phorbol ester.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
We have measured the inhibitory potencies of local anesthetics (procaine, lidocaine, tetracaine and dibucaine) on ATP-mediated H+-translocation, Ca2+-transport and ATPase activity in membrane vesicles from Mycobacterium phlei. Procaine and lidocaine up to 1 mM concentration did not inhibit ATP-dependent H+-translocation, Ca2+-transport and ATPase activity. However, tetracaine and dibucaine at 0.2 mM concentration caused dissipation of the proton gradient, measured by the reversal of the quenching of fluorescence of quinacrine, and inhibition of active Ca2+-transport. Tetracaine (1 mM) inhibited membrane-bound ATPase activity without affecting solubilized F1-ATPase activity. Studies show that these local anesthetics do not prevent the inactivation of F0-F1 ATPase by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD). Binding of [14C]DCCD to F0-proteolipid component remained unchanged in the presence of tetracaine indicating that DCCD and tetracaine do not share common binding sites on the F0-proteolipid sector. The inhibition of H+-translocation and membrane-bound ATPase activity by tetracaine was substantially additive in the presence of vanadate.  相似文献   

8.
Some of the present in vitro experiments compare the degree of inhibition of fast axonal transport produced by tetracaine at neutral and at alkaline pH. In desheathed spinal nerves from bullfrog, 0.5 mM tetracaine reduced the quantity of [3H]leucine-labeled proteins which were transported to a ligature by 43% at pH 7.2 and by 96% at pH 8.2; separate experiments established that transport was not affected by the pH change in the absence of tetracaine. The relationship between pH and transport-blocking potency of tetracaine (pKa 8.2) is such that the local anesthetic is more potent when more uncharged form of the molecule is present; this may reflect the easier penetration across the axonal plasma membrane by the uncharged form of the tetracaine molecule. The axonal smooth endoplasmic reticulum has been attributed the function of a calcium reservoir, and it appeared possible that local anesthetics could block axonal transport by releasing calcium from this structure. However, the inhibition of transport produced by 1 mM tetracaine (pH 7.1) in sheathed nerves was approximately 80% both in nerves with a lower than normal calcium content (47% of normal) and in nerves with a normal calcium content; this result does not support the hypothesis that inhibition of axonal transport by local anesthetics is mediated by an increase in intracellular free Ca2+, but does not rule out the hypothesis either.  相似文献   

9.
We have studied the effects of local anesthetics (dibucaine, tetracaine, lidocaine, and procaine) on calcium fluxes through the plasma membrane of synaptosomes. All these local anesthetics inhibit the ATP-dependent calcium uptake by inverted plasma membrane vesicles at concentrations close to those that promote an effective blockade of the action potential. The values obtained for the K0.5 of inhibition of calcium uptake are the following: 23 microM (dibucaine), 0.44 mM (lidocaine), 1.5 mM (procaine), and 0.8 mM (tetracaine). There is a good correlation between these K0.5 values and the concentrations of the local anesthetics that inhibit the Ca2(+)-dependent Mg2(+)-ATPase of these membranes. In addition, except for procaine, these local anesthetics stimulate severalfold the Ca2+ outflow via the Na+/Ca2+ exchange in these membranes. This effect, however, is observed at concentrations slightly higher than those that effectively inhibit the ATP-dependent Ca2+ uptake, e.g., 80-700 microM dibucaine, 2-10 mM lidocaine, and 1-3 mM tetracaine. The results suggest that the Ca2+ buffering of neuronal cytosol is altered by these anesthetics at pharmacological concentrations.  相似文献   

10.
Carbachol and substance P stimulated 45Ca2+ flux changes, 86Rb+ efflux, and amylase secretion from acinar cells isolated from rat parotid. The local anesthetic tetracaine blocked all of these measured responses to carbachol, but none of the responses to substance P. Tetracaine must act at either the cholinergic receptor or at a subsequent transducing step in the cholinergic stimulus-response sequence. If tetracaine acts at one of the transducing steps between cholinergic receptor occupation and the physiological responses then the action of tetracaine must be at a locus in the cholinergic reaction scheme not shared by substance P, because tetracaine did not block any response of the parotid to substance P.  相似文献   

11.
The local anesthetics procaine and tetracaine were found to quench the fluorescence of the probes N-octadecyl naphthyl-2-amine 6-sulfonic acid and 12-(9-anthroyl)stearic acid in the presence of erythrocyte membranes. This quenching was shown to be due to the aromatic amine of the procaine and tetracaine molecules. Lidocaine, an active anesthetic that does not contain an aromatic amine in the same position as does procaine and tetracaine did not quench either of the fluorophores. The preferential quenching of the fluorescent probes by procaine and tetracaine indicated a greater accessibility of tetracaine than of procaine to the hydrocarbon region of the membrane and a greater accessibility of procaine than of tetracaine at the membrane's surface. The addition of calcium was found to reverse the quenching of 12-(9-anthroyl)stearic acid by tetracaine in the presence of red cell membranes.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of local anesthetics and barbiturates on the ATP-dependent H+ transport in synaptic vesicle membranes from rat brain were studied using a fluorescent probe, acridine orange. Local anesthetics depressed the active H+ transport with the following order of potencies: tetracaine trimecaine lidocaine procaine. Respective IC50 values were 0.07, 0.28, 0.46 and 0.60 mM. The local anesthetics also disrupted the endogenous pH gradient seen in the absence of ATP. Barbiturates inhibited the active H+ transport showing IC50 values in the range of 2-5 mM except for benzobarbital and barbital characterized by IC50 values of 0.5 and 20 mM, respectively. The order of potencies was benzobarbital hexobarbital amobarbital pentobarbital phenobarbital barbital. The endogenous pH gradient was not affected by the barbiturates. The results show that local anesthetics disrupt the H+ transport by acting as permeable weak bases (uncouplers) whereas barbiturates are likely to block and anion channel which maintains electroneutrality of the H+ transport in the membrane of synaptic vesicles.  相似文献   

13.
Four amphipathic molecules with known local anesthetic activity, dibucaine, tetracaine, chlorpomazine, and quinacrine, inhibited the binding ofl-[3H]glutamic acid to rat brain synaptic plasma membranes and to the purified glutamate binding protein. Neither haloperidol nor diphenylhydantoin had significant inhibitory effects on the glutamate binding activity of the membranes or of the purified protein. The amphipathic drugs apparently inhibitedl-[3H]glutamate binding to synaptic membranes by a mixed type of inhibition. The inhibitory activity of quinacrine on glutamate binding to the synaptic membranes was greater in a low ionic strength, Ca2+-free buffer medium, than in a physiologic medium (Krebs-Henseleit buffer). Removal of Ca2+ from the Krebs solution enhanced quinacrine's inhibition of glutamate binding. Quinacrine up to 1 mM concentration did not inhibit the high affinity Na+-dependentl-glutamate transport in these membrane preparations. The importance of Ca2+ in the expression of quinacrine's effects on the glutamate binding activity of synaptic membranes and the observed tetracaine and chlorpromazine-induced increases in the transition temperature for the glutamate binding process of these membranes, were indicative of an interaction of the local anesthetics with the lipid environment of the glutamate binding sites.  相似文献   

14.
The membrane-buffer partition coefficient of tetracaine was measured by direct ultraviolet spectrophotometry in dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine unilamellar liposomes at temperatures above and below the main phase transition. The partition coefficients of uncharged tetracaine to solid-gel (18 degrees C) and liquid-crystal (30 degrees C) membranes were 6.9 x 10(4) and 1.2 x 10(5), respectively. Despite the general assumption that local anesthetic binding to the solid membrane is negligible, this study showed that the solid membrane binding amounts to 57.5% of the liquid membrane binding. Binding of the charged form to the liquid or solid membrane was not detectable under the present experimental condition of 0.03 mM tetracaine bulk concentration. The present method measures metachromasia of local anesthetics when bound to lipid membranes. Its advantage is that the separation of the vesicles from the solution is not required. A linearized equation is presented that estimates the partition coefficient or binding constant graphically from a linear plot of the absorbance data. The method is applicable for estimation of drug partition when a measurable spectral change occurs due to complex formation.  相似文献   

15.
Carbachol and substance P stimulated 45Ca2+ flux changes, 86Rb+ efflux, and amylase secretion from acinar cells isolated fromrat parotid. The local anesthetic tetracaine blocked all of these measured responsed to carbachol, but none of the responses to substance P. Tetracaine must act at either the cholinergic receptor or at a subsequent transducing step in the cholinergic stimulus-response sequence. If tetracaine acts at one of the transducing steps between cholinergic receptor occupation and the physiological responses then the action of tetracaine must be at a locus in the cholinergic reaction scheme not shared by substance P, because tetracaine did not block any response of the parotid to substance P.  相似文献   

16.
To provide a basis for studying the molecular mechanism of pharmacological action of local anesthetics, we carried out a study of the membrane actions of tetracaine, bupivacaine, lidocaine, prilocaine and procaine. Fluorescence polarization of 12-(9-anthroyloxy)stearic acid (12-AS) and 2-(9-anthroyloxy)stearic acid (2-AS) were used to examine the effects of local anesthetics on differential rotational mobility between polar region and hydrocarbon interior of synaptosomal plasma membrane vesicles (SPMV) isolated from bovine cerebral cortex, and liposomes of total lipids (SPMVTL) and phospholipids (SPMVPL) extracted from the SPMV. The two membrane components differed with respect to 2 and 12 anthroyloxy stearate (2-AS, 12-AS) probes, indicating that a difference in the membrane fluidity may be present. In a dose-dependent manner, tetracaine, bupivacaine, lidocaine, prilocaine and procaine decreased anisotropy of 12-AS in the hydrocarbon interior of the SPMV, SPMVTL and SPMVPL, but tetracaine, bupivacaine, lidocaine and prilocaine increased anisotropy of 2-AS in the membrane interface. These results indicate that local anesthetics have significant disordering effects on hydrocarbon interior of the SPMV, SPMVTL and SPMVPL, but have significant ordering effects on the membrane interface, and thus they could affect the transport of Na+ and K+ in nerve membranes, leading to anesthetic action.  相似文献   

17.
Interactions of two local anesthetics, dibucaine and tetracaine have been studied with phospholipid vesicles containing cholesterol and/or monosialogangliosides (GM1) using fluorescence spectroscopy. The fluorescence intensity of tetracaine showed a marked increase with the increasing molar ratio of the phospholipid to tetracaine, while that of dibucaine showed opposite effects. Steady state anisotropy and the wavelength of maximum emission (λmax) decreased with the increasing phospholipids to tetracaine ratio. The extent of such changes in anisotropy and λmax in the presence and absence of two important components of neuronal membranes, cholesterol and GM1 indicated differential membrane localization of the two local anesthetics. To understand the intercellular mode of action of local anesthetics, we have also studied the interactions of dibucaine and tetracaine with brain spectrin which indicate differential spectrin interactions with similar binding strength. Thermodynamic parameters associated with such binding reveal that binding is favored by entropy. Tetracaine brings about distinct structural changes in spectrin compared to dibucaine, as reflected in the tryptophan mean lifetime and far-UV CD spectra. Tetracaine also exhibits a detergent-like property inducing concentration dependent decrease in spectrin anisotropy, further indicating structural changes in brain spectrin with probable implications in its anesthetic potential.  相似文献   

18.
Various local anesthetics enhanced the incorporation of [3H]inositol into phosphoinositides in guinea pig cerebral cortical synaptoneurosomes. Dibucaine, QX-572 and dimethisoquin showed maximum stimulation at 100 microM, tetracaine and diphenhydramine at 300 microM, and QX-314 at 1 mM, while quinacrine, lidocaine and cocaine showed no or only slight stimulation. There was no correlation between local anesthetic activity, estimated by inhibition of the 22Na+ flux elicited by the sodium channel activator batrachotoxin, and the potency for stimulation of inositol incorporation. A quaternary, relatively weak, local anesthetic, QX-572, was the most potent agent in stimulation of inositol incorporation, while the next most potent agent was dibucaine, a tertiary, very potent, local anesthetic. Dibucaine did not affect the uptake of [3H]inositol by synaptoneurosomes. The incorporation of [3H]inositol into phosphoinositides was increased in calcium-free buffer. The presence of dibucaine resulted in further stimulation of [3H]inositol incorporation in calcium-free buffer. Although dibucaine and QX-572 markedly stimulated incorporation of [3H]inositol into phosphoinositides, only QX-572 significantly enhanced the incorporation of 32PO4(3-) into phosphoinositides. The results suggest that certain local anesthetics enhance a pathway involving an exchange reaction between inositol and the phosphoinositol ester bond of phosphatidylinositol, but do not markedly affect the de novo pathway of phosphoinositide synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
E C Kelusky  I C Smith 《Biochemistry》1983,22(25):6011-6017
The interaction of the local anesthetics tetracaine and procaine with multilamellar dispersions of phosphatidylethanolamine has been investigated by using 2H NMR of specifically deuterated anesthetics. Tetracaine was found to partition more strongly than procaine into the lipid. The 2H NMR spectra showed a quadrupole doublet and a narrow line, with the former corresponding to membrane-bound anesthetic and the latter to anesthetic free in solution. The integrated areas of the narrow line and of the doublet correspond to the concentrations of free and bound anesthetic predicted from the Kp values. There is no strong pH dependence for the quadrupole splittings of tetracaine, suggesting a similar depth of penetration into the lipid bilayer over the entire pH range. The data are consistent with a model in which tetracaine acts as a wedge to stabilize the phosphatidylethanolamine bilayer against transition to a hexagonal structure. Procaine is proposed to sit higher in the phosphatidylethanolamine bilayer than does tetracaine. The T1 values were generally shorter in the membrane than in solution, suggesting slower motions, particularly for the aromatic ring of tetracaine.  相似文献   

20.
Corynebacterium glutamicum is used for the industrial production of glutamate. Excretion of the amino acid may be induced by various means. We have analyzed the characteristics of glutamate excretion induced by two amine surfactants, dodecylammonium acetate (DA) and dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide (DTA). Addition of these surfactants induced an immediate efflux of internal glutamate. It also induced a perturbation of the energetic parameters of the cell (decrease of delta mu H, decrease of the internal ATP concentration). The efflux was not the result of these perturbations: glutamate is taken up by the cells via an ATP-dependent unidirectional active transport system and no efflux took place as a consequence of an artificial decrease of the energetic parameters. In addition, amine surfactants also induced an excretion of other species, in particular potassium. We have tested the possibility that the effluxes result from a permeabilization of the lipid bilayer by analyzing the interactions between the surfactants and liposomes.  相似文献   

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