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1.
The most important target protein for many anesthetics, including volatile and steroid anesthetics, appears to be the type A gamma-amino butyric acid receptor (GABA(A)R), yet direct binding remains to be demonstrated. Hypotheses of lipid-mediated anesthesia suggest that lipid bilayer properties are changed by anesthetics and that this in turn affects the functions of proteins. While other data could equally well support direct or lipid-mediated action, enantiomeric specificity displayed by some anesthetics is not reflected in their interactions with lipids. In the present study, we studied the effects of two pairs of anesthetic steroid enantiomers on bilayers of several compositions, measuring potentially relevant physical properties. For one of the pairs, allopregnanolone and ent-allopregnanolone, the natural enantiomer is 300% more efficacious as an anesthetic, while for the other, pregnanolone and ent-pregnanolone, there is little difference in anesthetic potency. For each enantiomer pair, we could find no differences. This strongly favors the view that the effects of these anesthetics on lipid bilayers are not relevant for the main features of anesthesia. These steroids also provide tools to distinguish in general the direct binding of steroids to proteins from lipid-mediated effects.  相似文献   

2.
T J O'Leary  P D Ross  I W Levin 《Biochemistry》1984,23(20):4636-4641
The effects of anesthetic and nonanesthetic steroids on dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine liposomes were studied by use of high sensitivity scanning calorimetry and Raman spectroscopy. Calorimetric measurements indicated that both anesthetic and nonanesthetic steroids depressed and broadened the gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition. There was no correlation between the perturbations by the steroids on the primary gel to liquid-crystalline phase transition temperature and anesthetic potency. The magnitudes of the steroid-induced transition broadening and lowering of the pretransition temperature, however, correlated well with anesthetic potency. This effect appeared to arise from the projection from the plane of the D ring of substituents at the C(17) position of the steroid nucleus. Raman spectroscopic measurements demonstrated that the steroid molecule is localized within the acyl region of the bilayer and that effects of the steroid do not extend to either the head-group or interface regions of the lamellae. The data are consistent with unitary hypotheses relating general anesthesia to lipid perturbations. For model systems, perturbations to the subtle structural and dynamical properties of the bilayer pretransition may provide a more sensitive marker than the main phase transition in assessing the significance of lipid mediation in inducing anesthetic action.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of local anesthetics on lipid multilayers. A spin probe study   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The effects of a series of local anesthetics on multilayers formed from ox brain white matter lipids were investigated using an intercalated spin-labeled analog of cholestane as a monitor of molecular organization. Local anesthetics could disorder or disrupt these films at pH values approaching or above the pK of the anesthetic. At a constant concentration of a local anesthetic this effect increased with increasing pH. In films formed from lipids with a reduced cholesterol content, local anesthetics promoted the formation of ordered multilamellar arrays and increased their thermal stability. This effect required a lower concentration of local anesthetic than did the disordering effect, and each local anesthetic exhibited an optimal pH range. Depending upon the lipid, the concentration of anesthetic, and the pH of the bathing solution, local anesthetics can either stabilize or disrupt lipid bilayers.  相似文献   

4.
The molecular mechanism of general anesthesia is still a controversial issue. Direct effect by linking of anesthetics to proteins and indirect action on the lipid membrane properties are the two hypotheses in conflict. Atomistic simulations of different lipid membranes subjected to the effect of small volatile organohalogen compounds are used to explore plausible lipid-mediated mechanisms. Simulations of homogeneous membranes reveal that electrostatic potential and lateral pressure transversal profiles are affected differently by chloroform (anesthetic) and carbon tetrachloride (non-anesthetic). Simulations of structured membranes that combine ordered and disordered regions show that chloroform molecules accumulate preferentially in highly disordered lipid domains, suggesting that the combination of both lateral and transversal partitioning of chloroform in the cell membrane could be responsible of its anesthetic action.  相似文献   

5.
6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
Although general anesthetics are clinically important and widely used, their molecular mechanisms of action remain poorly understood. Volatile anesthetics such as isoflurane (ISO) are thought to alter neuronal function by depressing excitatory and facilitating inhibitory neurotransmission through direct interactions with specific protein targets, including voltage-gated sodium channels (Nav). Many anesthetics alter lipid bilayer properties, suggesting that ion channel function might also be altered indirectly through effects on the lipid bilayer. We compared the effects of ISO and of a series of fluorobenzene (FB) model volatile anesthetics on Nav function and lipid bilayer properties. We examined the effects of these agents on Nav in neuronal cells using whole-cell electrophysiology, and on lipid bilayer properties using a gramicidin-based fluorescence assay, which is a functional assay for detecting changes in lipid bilayer properties sensed by a bilayer-spanning ion channel. At clinically relevant concentrations (defined by the minimum alveolar concentration), both the FBs and ISO produced prepulse-dependent inhibition of Nav and shifted the voltage dependence of inactivation toward more hyperpolarized potentials without affecting lipid bilayer properties, as sensed by gramicidin channels. Only at supra-anesthetic (toxic) concentrations did ISO alter lipid bilayer properties. These results suggest that clinically relevant concentrations of volatile anesthetics alter Nav function through direct interactions with the channel protein with little, if any, contribution from changes in bulk lipid bilayer properties. Our findings further suggest that changes in lipid bilayer properties are not involved in clinical anesthesia.  相似文献   

9.
《FEBS letters》2014,588(23):4398-4403
General anesthetics have previously been shown to bind mitochondrial VDAC. Here, using a photoactive analog of the anesthetic propofol, we determined that alkylphenol anesthetics bind to Gly56 and Val184 on rat VDAC1. By reconstituting rat VDAC into planar bilayers, we determined that propofol potentiates VDAC gating with asymmetry at the voltage polarities; in contrast, propofol does not affect the conductance of open VDAC. Additional experiments showed that propofol also does not affect gramicidin A properties that are sensitive to lipid bilayer mechanics. Together, this suggests propofol affects VDAC function through direct protein binding, likely at the lipid-exposed channel surface, and that gating can be modulated by ligand binding to the distal ends of VDAC β-strands where Gly56 and Val184 are located.  相似文献   

10.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAcChoR) has an absolute requirement for cholesterol if agonist-stimulated channel opening is to occur [Biochemistry 25 (1986) 830]. Certain non-polar analogs could replace cholesterol in vectorial vesicle permeability assays. Using a stopped-flow fluorescence assay to avoid the limitations of permeability assays imposed by vesicle morphology, it was shown that polar conjugates of cholesterol could also satisfy the sterol requirement [Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1370 (1998) 299]. Here this assay is used to explore the chemical specificity of sterols. Affinity-purified nAcChoRs from Torpedo were reconstituted into bilayers at mole ratios of 58:12:30 [1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC)/1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphate (DOPA)/steroid]. When the enantiomer of cholesterol was used, or when the stereochemistry at the 3-hydroxy group was changed from β to α by substituting epicholesterol for cholesterol, activation was still supported. The importance of cholesterol's planar ring structure was tested by comparing planar cholestanol (5α-cholestan-3β-ol) with nonplanar coprostanol (5β-cholestan-3β-ol). Both supported activation. Thus, these steroids support activation independent of structural features known to be important for modulation of lipid bilayer properties. This provides indirect support for a steroid binding site possessing very lax structural requirements.  相似文献   

11.
Manderson GA  Johansson JS 《Biochemistry》2002,41(12):4080-4087
Currently, the mechanism by which anesthesia occurs is thought to involve the direct binding of inhaled anesthetics to ligand-gated ion channels. This hypothesis is being studied using four-alpha-helix bundles as model systems for the transmembrane domains of the natural "receptor" proteins. This study concerns the role in anesthetic binding played by aromatic side chains in the binding cavity of a four-alpha-helix bundle designed to assume a Rop-like fold. Specifically, the effect of the substitution W15Y on bundle structure, stability, and anesthetic binding energetics was investigated. No appreciable effect of substituting W for Y on the secondary structure or the thermodynamic stability of the four-alpha-helix bundle was identified. However, the substitution W15Y resulted in about 6- and 3-fold decreases in halothane and chloroform binding affinities, respectively. This effect may reflect weaker dipole-aromatic quadrupole interactions between the aromatic side chain and the anesthetic in the tyrosine-containing species, which possesses the smaller aromatic ring system. For these anesthetic binding proteins, this class of interaction occurs when the permanent nonspherical distribution of electrons in the aromatic ring systems interact with the weakly acidic CH group of the anesthetics.  相似文献   

12.
We recently demonstrated that the anionic detergent sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) specifically interacts with the anesthetic binding site in horse spleen apoferritin, a soluble protein which models anesthetic binding sites in receptors. This raises the possibility of other detergents similarly interacting with and occluding such sites from anesthetics, thereby preventing the proper identification of novel anesthetic binding sites. n-Dodecyl β-D-maltoside (DDM) is a non-ionic detergent commonly used during protein-anesthetic studies because of its mild and non-denaturing properties. In this study, we demonstrate that SDS and DDM occupy anesthetic binding sites in the model proteins human serum albumin (HSA) and horse spleen apoferritin and thereby inhibit the binding of the general anesthetics propofol and isoflurane. DDM specifically interacts with HSA (Kd?=?40?μM) with a lower affinity than SDS (Kd?=?2?μM). DDM exerts all these effects while not perturbing the native structures of either model protein. Computational calculations corroborated the experimental results by demonstrating that the binding sites for DDM and both anesthetics on the model proteins overlapped. Collectively, our results indicate that DDM and SDS specifically interact with anesthetic binding sites and may thus prevent the identification of novel anesthetic sites. Special precaution should be taken when undertaking and interpreting results from protein-anesthetic investigations utilizing detergents like SDS and DDM.  相似文献   

13.
Current anesthetics, especially the inhaled ones, have troublesome side effects and may be associated with durable changes in cognition. It is therefore highly desirable to develop novel chemical entities that reduce these effects while preserving or enhancing anesthetic potency. In spite of progress toward identifying protein targets involved in anesthesia, we still do not have the necessary atomic level structural information to delineate their interactions with anesthetic molecules. Recently, we have described a protein target, apoferritin, to which several anesthetics bind specifically and in a pharmacodynamically relevant manner. Further, we have reported the high resolution X-ray structure of two anesthetic/apoferritin complexes (Liu, R.; Loll, P. J.; Eckenhoff, R. G. FASEB J. 2005, 19, 567). Thus, we describe in this paper a structure-based approach to establish validated shape pharmacophore models for future application to virtual and high throughput screening of anesthetic compounds. We use the 3D structure of apoferritin as the basis for the development of several shape pharmacophore models. To validate these models, we demonstrate that (1) they can be used to effectively recover known anesthetic agents from a diverse database of compounds; (2) the shape pharmacophore scores afford a significant linear correlation with the measured binding energetics of several known anesthetic compounds to the apoferritin site; and (3) the computed scores based on the shape pharmacophore models also predict the trend of the EC50 values of a set of anesthetics. Therefore, we have now obtained a set of structure-based shape pharmacophore models, using ferritin as the surrogate target, which may afford a new way to rationally discover novel anesthetic agents in the future.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Douglas F. Covey 《Steroids》2009,74(7):577-585
Membrane receptors are often modulated by steroids and it is necessary to distinguish the effects of steroids at these receptors from effects occurring at nuclear receptors. Additionally, it may also be mechanistically important to distinguish between direct effects caused by binding of steroids to membrane receptors and indirect effects on membrane receptor function caused by steroid perturbation of the membrane containing the receptor. In this regard, ent-steroids, the mirror images of naturally occurring steroids, are novel tools for distinguishing between these various actions of steroids. The review provides a background for understanding the different actions that can be expected of steroids and ent-steroids in biological systems, references for the preparation of ent-steroids, a short discussion about relevant forms of stereoisomerism and the requirements that need to be fulfilled for the interaction between two molecules to be enantioselective. The review then summarizes results of biophysical, biochemical and pharmacological studies published since 1992 in which ent-steroids have been used to investigate the actions of steroids in membranes and/or receptor-mediated signaling pathways.  相似文献   

16.
Bovine seminal plasma (BSP) contains a family of phospholipid-binding proteins. The affinity of the protein BSP-A1/-A2 for lipid membranes composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC), and POPC containing 30% (mol/mol) 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoglycerol (POPG), 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (POPE) or cholesterol, has been investigated by the isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). This study confirms the association of these proteins to lipid bilayers, and provides a direct characterization of this exothermic process, at 37 °C. The measurements indicate that the protein affinity for lipid bilayers is modulated by the lipid composition, the lipid/protein ratio, and the temperature. The saturation lipid/protein ratio was increased in the presence of cholesterol and, to a lesser extent, of phosphatidylethanolamine, suggesting that it is modulated by the lipid acyl chain order. For all the investigated systems, the binding of BSP-A1/-A2 could not be modeled using a simple partitioning of the proteins between the aqueous and lipid phases. The existence of "binding sites", and lipid phase separations is discussed. The decrease of temperature, from 37 to 10 °C, converts the exothermic association of the proteins to the POPC bilayers to an endothermic process. A complementary 1-D and 2-D infrared spectroscopy study excludes the thermal denaturation of BSP-A1/-A2 as a contributor in the temperature dependence of the protein affinity for lipid bilayers. The reported findings suggest that changes in the affinity of BSP-A1/-A2 for lipid bilayers could be involved in modulating the association of these proteins to sperm membranes as a function of space and time; this would consequently modulate the extent of lipid extraction, including cholesterol, at a given place and given time.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of anesthetics and analgesics on ion channels have been the subject of intense research since recent reports of direct actions of anesthetic molecules on ion channel proteins. It is now known that ligand-gated channels, particularly γ-amino-butyric acid (GABAA) and N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors, play a key role in mediating anesthetic actions, but these channels are unable to account for all aspects of clinical anesthesia such as loss of consciousness, immobility, analgesia, amnesia and muscle relaxation. Furthermore, an assortment of voltage-gated and background channels also display anesthetic sensitivity and a key question arises: What role do these other channels play in clinical anesthesia? These channels have overlapping physiological roles and pharmacological profiles, making it difficult to assign aspects of the anesthetic state to individual channel types. Here, we will focus on the function of neuronal voltage-gated calcium channels in mediating the effects of general anesthetics.Key words: nitrous oxide, low-threshold calcium channel, nociception  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Fluorine-19 nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy is applied to the study of the environment of dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine-bound fluorinated ether anesthetics (enflurane, fluoroxene and methoxyflurane) both below and above the lipid gel to liquid crystal phase transition temperature. Line widths and spin-lattice relaxation time (T1) measurements are consistent with substantial immobilization of the lipid-bound anesthetic molecules. Heating anesthetic/lipid mixtures above the lipid transition temperature leads to narrowing of the lipid-bound anesthetic fluorine resonances accompanied by little or no change in anesthetic fluorine-19 chemical shifts, suggesting that although the mobility of the bound anesthetic increases at the higher temperature, the nature of the anesthetic-lipid interaction changes little as a result of this phase change. Differential scanning calorimetric studies of the effects of these anesthetics on the phase transition behavior of the phospholipid indicate that the regions of the bilayer in which volatile anesthetics partition at lower concentrations are different from the regions in which they partition at higher concentrations.  相似文献   

20.
Because it is well established that the anesthetic state can be reversed by pressure, a number of molecular theories that have been proposed for the mechanism of action of both local and general anesthetics can be tested by varying the pressure. Using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, we report here the first direct observation of the expulsion from lipid bilayers of a local anesthetic, tetracaine, by pressure. Moreover, we establish for the first time that this phenomenon is common to both model membranes and to myelinated and unmyelinated nerve membranes, vindicating the utility of model membrane systems. A distinctive feature of this behavior in model systems is that, in saturated phosphatidylcholines at high pH, expulsion only occurs in the presence of cholesterol, whose ordering effect on the acyl chains evidently assists pressure in squeezing the anesthetic out of the bilayer. This pressure-induced phenomenon may provide insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying the antagonistic effect of pressure against anesthesia.  相似文献   

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