Sugino Shigekazu, Hayase Tomo, Yamakage Michiaki
Department of Anesthesiology, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo 060-8543.
Masui. 2013 Mar;62(3):296-303.
Much progress has been made in omics research following completion of the Human Genome Project. This comprehensive analysis produced a new discipline (i.e., bioinformatics), and its findings contributed to the clinical practice of anesthesiology. Genomes of patients show genetic variations and may predict the sensitivity to anesthetics and analgesics, incidence of adverse effects, and intensity of postsurgical pain. Changes in the transcriptomes of patients may also reflect anesthesia-related expression profiles of various types of neurons in the brain, and information on such changes may contribute to molecular targeted therapy in anesthetized patients. In addition, novel epigenome research may explain why environments change the phenotypes of clinical anesthesia. We currently hypothesize that female gender is associated with DNA methylation in pain-related and vomiting-related gene promoter regions at the genome-wide level and that epigenetic mechanisms are involved in gender differences in anesthesia practice.
人类基因组计划完成后,组学研究取得了很大进展。这种全面分析产生了一门新学科(即生物信息学),其研究结果对麻醉学的临床实践有所贡献。患者的基因组显示出基因变异,可能预测对麻醉药和镇痛药的敏感性、不良反应的发生率以及术后疼痛的强度。患者转录组的变化也可能反映大脑中各种类型神经元的麻醉相关表达谱,关于此类变化的信息可能有助于麻醉患者的分子靶向治疗。此外,新的表观基因组研究可能解释环境为何会改变临床麻醉的表型。我们目前推测,在全基因组水平上,女性性别与疼痛相关和呕吐相关基因启动子区域的DNA甲基化有关,并且表观遗传机制参与了麻醉实践中的性别差异。