Maclver M B, Mikulec A A, Amagasu S M, Monroe F A
Department of Anesthesia, Stanford University School of Medicine, California, USA.
Anesthesiology. 1996 Oct;85(4):823-34. doi: 10.1097/00000542-199610000-00018.
Recent evidence for a presynaptic depression of glutamate release produced by volatile anesthetics prompted the current study of isoflurane and halothane effects on glutamate-mediated transmission in the mammalian central nervous system.
Electrophysiologic recordings from CA1 neurons in rat hippocampal brain slices were used to measure anesthetic effects on glutamate-mediated excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) amplitudes and paired pulse facilitation. Paired pulse facilitation is known to be altered when the calcium-dependent release of glutamate is depressed, but not when EPSP amplitudes are depressed by postsynaptic mechanisms.
Isoflurane depressed EPSP amplitudes over a concentration range of 0.35-2.8 vol %, with a 50% depression (EC50) occurring at 1.0 vol % (0.71 rat minimum alveolar concentration). This depression was accompanied by an increase in paired-pulse facilitation of approximately 30% at 1.7 vol %, using interpulse intervals of 120 ms. Halothane depressed EPSP amplitudes in a concentration-dependent manner (0.3-2.4 vol %, EC50 = 1.1 minimum alveolar concentration; 1.3 vol %) and also increased facilitation by approximately 20% at 1.2 vol %. These effects persisted in the presence of 10 microM bicuculline, indicating that enhanced gamma-aminobutyric acid-mediated inhibition was not involved. The anesthetic-induced increase in facilitation and EPSP depression was mimicked by lowering extracellular calcium, which is known to depress glutamate release at these synapses. The postsynaptic glutamate receptor antagonist 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione depressed EPSP amplitudes with no change in facilitation.
Our results confirm earlier findings that clinically relevant concentrations of volatile anesthetics depress glutamate-mediated synaptic transmission. The observed increases in synaptic facilitation support recent findings from biochemical and electrophysiologic studies indicating presynaptic sites of action contribute to anesthetic-induced depression of excitatory transmission. This anesthetic-induced reduction in glutamate release would contribute to the central nervous system depression associated with anesthesia by adding to postsynaptic depressant actions on glutamate receptors.
近期有证据表明挥发性麻醉剂可导致谷氨酸释放的突触前抑制,这促使了当前对异氟烷和氟烷对哺乳动物中枢神经系统中谷氨酸介导的传递作用的研究。
采用大鼠海马脑片CA1神经元的电生理记录来测量麻醉剂对谷氨酸介导的兴奋性突触后电位(EPSP)幅度和双脉冲易化的影响。已知当谷氨酸的钙依赖性释放受抑制时,双脉冲易化会发生改变,但当EPSP幅度因突触后机制而受抑制时则不会。
异氟烷在0.35 - 2.8体积%的浓度范围内降低EPSP幅度,在1.0体积%(0.71倍大鼠最低肺泡浓度)时出现50%的抑制(EC50)。这种抑制伴随着在1.7体积%时双脉冲易化增加约30%,使用的脉冲间隔为120毫秒。氟烷以浓度依赖性方式降低EPSP幅度(0.3 - 2.4体积%,EC50 = 1.1倍最低肺泡浓度;1.3体积%),并且在1.2体积%时也使易化增加约20%。在存在10微摩尔荷包牡丹碱的情况下这些效应仍然存在,表明增强的γ-氨基丁酸介导的抑制不参与其中。通过降低细胞外钙可模拟麻醉剂诱导的易化增加和EPSP抑制,已知降低细胞外钙会抑制这些突触处的谷氨酸释放。突触后谷氨酸受体拮抗剂6-氰基-7-硝基喹喔啉-2,3-二酮降低EPSP幅度而不改变易化。
我们的结果证实了早期的发现,即临床相关浓度的挥发性麻醉剂会抑制谷氨酸介导的突触传递。观察到的突触易化增加支持了生物化学和电生理研究的近期发现,表明突触前作用位点促成了麻醉剂诱导的兴奋性传递抑制。这种麻醉剂诱导的谷氨酸释放减少会通过增加对谷氨酸受体的突触后抑制作用而导致与麻醉相关的中枢神经系统抑制。