Löscher W, Rohlfs A, Rundfeldt C
Department of Pharmacology, Toxicology, and Pharmacy, School of Veterinary Medicine, Hannover, Germany.
Brain Res. 1995 Dec 8;702(1-2):133-44. doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(95)01030-4.
Nondopaminergic, presumably GABAergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNR) are thought to function as a gating mechanism for seizure propagation. Systemic administration of anticonvulsant doses of the antiepileptic drug valproate (VPA) has previously been reported to inhibit the firing of nondopaminergic SNR neurons in anesthetized but not in awake, paralyzed and locally anesthetized rats, suggesting that the findings in anesthetized rats were due to an interaction between VPA and the general anesthetic used. In the present study, we determined the influence of different anesthetic measures on the effect of an anticonvulsant dose of VPA (100 mg/kg) on extracellularly recorded spontaneous single unit activity of nondopaminergic SNR neurons in rats. Rats were anesthetized by continuous infusion of the general anesthetic chloral hydrate, the dissociative anesthetic ketamine or the narcotic opioid fentanyl, or were only locally anesthetized and paralyzed. VPA significantly reduced SNR firing in all groups with a time course that matched its anticonvulsant time course in rodents. However, VPA's inhibitory effect on SNR firing was significantly less marked under anesthesia with chloral hydrate than in any of the other groups, indicating that this anesthetic suppresses the action of VPA, which may be related to an interaction with GABA-related processes in the SNR. The closest approximation to the effect of VPA in awake rats was obtained under anesthesia with ketamine, while VPA's inhibitory action on SNR neuronal firing seemed to be enhanced in the fentanyl group, which exhibited the highest baseline firing rates of all groups. Determination of VPA in the SN showed that the difference in VPA's inhibitory effect on SNR neurons was not secondary to differences in local drug concentrations. The data demonstrate that VPA is capable of significantly slowing the spontaneous activity of nondopaminergic SNR neurons, but that the magnitude of this effect depends on the anesthetic measures used. In view of the presumed role of SNR neurons in seizure propagation and the finding that VPA consistently inhibits these neurons at an anticonvulsant dose, the present data suggest that suppression of spontaneous SNR neuronal firing may be an important mechanism through which VPA exerts its anticonvulsant properties.
黑质网状部(SNR)中的非多巴胺能神经元,推测为γ-氨基丁酸能(GABAergic)神经元,被认为是癫痫发作传播的一种门控机制。先前有报道称,全身给予抗癫痫药物丙戊酸(VPA)的抗惊厥剂量,可抑制麻醉大鼠而非清醒、麻痹和局部麻醉大鼠中非多巴胺能SNR神经元的放电,这表明麻醉大鼠中的这些发现是由于VPA与所用全身麻醉剂之间的相互作用所致。在本研究中,我们确定了不同麻醉措施对VPA抗惊厥剂量(100mg/kg)对大鼠非多巴胺能SNR神经元细胞外记录的自发单单位活动影响的作用。大鼠通过持续输注全身麻醉剂水合氯醛、解离麻醉剂氯胺酮或麻醉性阿片类药物芬太尼进行麻醉,或者仅进行局部麻醉和麻痹。VPA在所有组中均显著降低了SNR放电,其时间进程与其在啮齿动物中的抗惊厥时间进程相匹配。然而,与其他任何组相比,水合氯醛麻醉下VPA对SNR放电的抑制作用明显较弱,这表明这种麻醉剂抑制了VPA的作用,这可能与它与SNR中GABA相关过程的相互作用有关。氯胺酮麻醉下获得了与VPA在清醒大鼠中的作用最接近的效果,而在芬太尼组中VPA对SNR神经元放电的抑制作用似乎增强了,该组在所有组中表现出最高的基线放电率。SN中VPA的测定表明,VPA对SNR神经元抑制作用的差异并非继发于局部药物浓度的差异。数据表明,VPA能够显著减慢非多巴胺能SNR神经元的自发活动,但这种作用的程度取决于所用的麻醉措施。鉴于SNR神经元在癫痫发作传播中的假定作用,以及VPA在抗惊厥剂量下持续抑制这些神经元的发现,目前的数据表明,抑制SNR神经元的自发放电可能是VPA发挥其抗惊厥特性的重要机制。