Naruo Hiroaki, Onizuka Shin, Prince David, Takasaki Mayumi, Syed Naweed I
Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology Research Group, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Anesthesiology. 2005 May;102(5):920-8. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200505000-00010.
As compared with their effects on both inhibitory and excitatory synapses, little is known about the mechanisms by which general anesthetics affect synaptic plasticity that forms the basis for learning and memory at the cellular level. To test whether clinically relevant concentrations of sevoflurane affect short-term potentiation involving cholinergic synaptic transmission, the soma-soma synapses between identified, postsynaptic neurons were used.
Uniquely identifiable neurons visceral dorsal 4 (presynaptic) and left pedal dorsal 1 (postsynaptic) of the mollusk Lymnaea stagnalis were isolated from the intact ganglion and paired overnight in a soma-soma configuration. Simultaneous intracellular recordings coupled with fluorescent imaging of the FM1-43 dye were made in either the absence or the presence of sevoflurane.
Cholinergic synapses, similar to those observed in vivo, developed between the neurons, and the synaptic transmission exhibited classic short-term, posttetanic potentiation. Action potential-induced (visceral dorsal 4), 1:1 excitatory postsynaptic potentials were reversibly and significantly suppressed by sevoflurane in a concentration-dependent manner. Fluorescent imaging with the dye FM1-43 revealed that sevoflurane did not affect presynaptic exocytosis or endocytosis; instead, postsynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptors were blocked in a concentration-dependent manner. To test the hypothesis that sevoflurane affects short-term potentiation, a posttetanic potentiation paradigm was used, and synaptic transmission was examined in either the presence or the absence of sevoflurane. Although 1.5% sevoflurane significantly reduced synaptic transmission between the paired cells, it did not affect the formation or retention of posttetanic potentiation at this synapse.
This study demonstrates that sevoflurane blocks cholinergic synaptic transmission postsynaptically but does not affect short-term synaptic plasticity at the visceral dorsal 4-left pedal dorsal 1 synapse.
与全身麻醉药对抑制性和兴奋性突触的作用相比,其影响构成细胞水平学习和记忆基础的突触可塑性的机制鲜为人知。为了测试临床相关浓度的七氟醚是否影响涉及胆碱能突触传递的短期增强,使用了已识别的突触后神经元之间的体-体突触。
从完整神经节中分离出淡水螺(Lymnaea stagnalis)独特可识别的内脏背侧4神经元(突触前)和左足背侧1神经元(突触后),并以体-体配置配对过夜。在不存在或存在七氟醚的情况下,进行细胞内同步记录并结合FM1-43染料的荧光成像。
神经元之间形成了与体内观察到的类似的胆碱能突触,并且突触传递表现出典型的短期强直后增强。动作电位诱导的(内脏背侧4)1:1兴奋性突触后电位被七氟醚以浓度依赖性方式可逆且显著地抑制。用FM1-43染料进行的荧光成像显示,七氟醚不影响突触前胞吐或胞吞作用;相反,突触后烟碱型乙酰胆碱受体以浓度依赖性方式被阻断。为了测试七氟醚影响短期增强的假设,使用了强直后增强范式,并在存在或不存在七氟醚的情况下检查突触传递。虽然1.5%的七氟醚显著降低了配对细胞之间的突触传递,但它不影响该突触处强直后增强的形成或维持。
本研究表明,七氟醚在突触后阻断胆碱能突触传递,但不影响内脏背侧4-左足背侧1突触处的短期突触可塑性。