Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, University of Pennsylvania, Perelman School of Medicine, 3620 Hamilton Walk, 334 John Morgan Building, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA; Center for Sleep and Circadian Neurobiology, University of Pennsylvania, Translational Research Laboratories, 125 S. 31st St., Philadelphia, PA 19104-3403, USA; Mahoney Institute for Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania, Clinical Research Building, 415 Curie Blvd, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan, 7433 Medical Science Building 1, 1150 West Medical Center Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA; Center for Consciousness Science, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA; Neuroscience Graduate Program, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Curr Biol. 2019 Nov 18;29(22):R1199-R1210. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.09.071.
General anesthesia serves a critically important function in the clinical care of human patients. However, the anesthetized state has foundational implications for biology because anesthetic drugs are effective in organisms ranging from paramecia, to plants, to primates. Although unconsciousness is typically considered the cardinal feature of general anesthesia, this endpoint is only strictly applicable to a select subset of organisms that are susceptible to being anesthetized. We review the behavioral endpoints of general anesthetics across species and propose the isolation of an organism from its environment - both in terms of the afferent arm of sensation and the efferent arm of action - as a generalizable definition. We also consider the various targets and putative mechanisms of general anesthetics across biology and identify key substrates that are conserved, including cytoskeletal elements, ion channels, mitochondria, and functionally coupled electrical or neural activity. We conclude with a unifying framework related to network function and suggest that general anesthetics - from single cells to complex brains - create inefficiency and enhance modularity, leading to the dissociation of functions both within an organism and between the organism and its surroundings. Collectively, we demonstrate that general anesthesia is not restricted to the domain of modern medicine but has broad biological relevance with wide-ranging implications for a diverse array of species.
全身麻醉在人类患者的临床护理中起着至关重要的作用。然而,麻醉状态对生物学具有基础性的影响,因为麻醉药物在从草履虫、植物到灵长类动物等各种生物体中都有效。尽管意识丧失通常被认为是全身麻醉的主要特征,但这个终点仅严格适用于易被麻醉的特定生物体子集。我们回顾了全身麻醉在不同物种中的行为终点,并提出将生物体与其环境隔离——包括感觉传入臂和动作传出臂——作为一种可推广的定义。我们还考虑了生物学中全身麻醉的各种靶点和潜在机制,并确定了包括细胞骨架元素、离子通道、线粒体以及功能耦合的电或神经活动在内的保守关键底物。最后,我们提出了一个与网络功能相关的统一框架,并认为全身麻醉——从单细胞到复杂大脑——会造成效率降低和模块性增强,从而导致生物体内部和生物体与其周围环境之间的功能分离。总之,我们证明全身麻醉不仅局限于现代医学领域,而是具有广泛的生物学相关性,对各种物种都有广泛的影响。