Bantel Carsten, Maze Mervyn, Trapp Stefan
Department of Anaesthetics, Pain Medicine and Intensive Care, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Anesthesiology. 2009 May;110(5):986-95. doi: 10.1097/ALN.0b013e31819dadc7.
Ischemic preconditioning is an important intrinsic mechanism for neuroprotection. Preconditioning can also be achieved by exposure of neurons to K+ channel-opening drugs that act on adenosine triphosphate-sensitive K+ (K(ATP)) channels. However, these agents do not readily cross the blood-brain barrier. Inhalational anesthetics which easily partition into brain have been shown to precondition various tissues. Here, the authors explore the neuronal preconditioning effect of modern inhalational anesthetics and investigate their effects on K(ATP) channels.
Neuronal-glial cocultures were exposed to inhalational anesthetics in a preconditioning paradigm, followed by oxygen-glucose deprivation. Increased cell survival due to preconditioning was quantified with the 3-(4,5-dimethyl-2-thiazolyl)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium bromide reduction test. Recombinant plasmalemmal K(ATP) channels of the main neuronal type (Kir6.2/SUR1) were expressed in HEK293 cells, and the effects of anesthetics were evaluated in whole cell patch clamp recordings.
Both sevoflurane and the noble gas xenon preconditioned neurons at clinically used concentrations. The effect of sevoflurane was independent of K(ATP) channel activation, whereas the effect of xenon required the opening of plasmalemmal K(ATP) channels. Recombinant K(ATP) channels were activated by xenon but inhibited by halogenated volatiles. Modulation of mitochondrial K-ATP channels did not affect the activity of K(ATP) channels, thus ruling out an indirect effect of volatiles via mitochondrial channels.
The preconditioning properties of halogenated volatiles cannot be explained by their effect on K(ATP) channels, whereas xenon preconditioning clearly involves the activation of these channels. Therefore, xenon might mimic the intrinsic mechanism of ischemic preconditioning most closely. This, together with its good safety profile, might suggest xenon as a viable neuroprotective agent in the clinical setting.
缺血预处理是一种重要的神经保护内在机制。通过使神经元暴露于作用于三磷酸腺苷敏感性钾离子(K(ATP))通道的钾离子通道开放药物也可实现预处理。然而,这些药物不易穿过血脑屏障。已证明容易进入脑内的吸入性麻醉药可对多种组织进行预处理。在此,作者探讨现代吸入性麻醉药的神经元预处理作用,并研究它们对K(ATP)通道的影响。
将神经元-神经胶质细胞共培养物按预处理模式暴露于吸入性麻醉药,随后进行氧-葡萄糖剥夺。通过3-(4,5-二甲基-2-噻唑基)-2,5-二苯基-2H-四氮唑溴盐还原试验对因预处理导致的细胞存活率增加进行定量。在HEK293细胞中表达主要神经元类型(Kir6.2/SUR1)的重组质膜K(ATP)通道,并在全细胞膜片钳记录中评估麻醉药的作用。
七氟醚和惰性气体氙在临床使用浓度下均可对神经元进行预处理。七氟醚的作用与K(ATP)通道激活无关,而氙的作用需要质膜K(ATP)通道开放。重组K(ATP)通道被氙激活,但被卤化挥发性麻醉药抑制。线粒体K-ATP通道的调节不影响K(ATP)通道的活性,从而排除了挥发性麻醉药通过线粒体通道产生的间接作用。
卤化挥发性麻醉药的预处理特性不能用其对K(ATP)通道的作用来解释,而氙预处理显然涉及这些通道的激活。因此,氙可能最接近地模拟缺血预处理的内在机制。这一点,连同其良好的安全性,可能表明氙在临床环境中是一种可行的神经保护剂。