Title: General Anesthesia: A more complex mechanism
1General AnesthesiaA more complex mechanism
The Meyer-Overton correlation and new research
into the mechanism of action of general
anesthesia.
2Purposes of General Anesthesia(Inhaled and
Intravenous)
- Amnesia
- Analgesia
- Immobility (muscle relaxation)
- Loss of consciousness
- Hypnosis
- Suppression of noxious reflexes
3Pharmacological Manipulation of the Neuronal Nexus
- Various areas of CNS mediate desired effects
- Unconsciousness
- Common mechanism with aspects of consciousness
- Cerebral cortex, thalamus, and reticular
formation - High density of ?-aminobutyric acid (GABA-A),
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and acetylcholine
(Ach) receptors - Subject to input from subcortical arousal systems
4- Amnesia
- Hippocampus, amygdala and prefrontal cortex
- Implicit memory recalled unconsciously (target
of anesthesia) - Explicit memory recalled consciously
- Use NMDA and non-NMDA receptors
- Respond to NT glutamate and serotonergic
interneurons
5- Immobility
- Sensory and motor neurons
- GABA-A receptor
- Glutamate receptors for NMDA, alpha-amino-5-methyl
-3-hydroxy-4-isoxazole propionic acid (AMPA) and
kainite - Analgesia
- Nocioception
- Blocking occurs at glutamate, GABA-A or (micro)
receptors in spinal cord
6Meyer-Overton Correlation
- Has been used to describe the mechanism of
volatile anesthetics - Linear relationship between potency and lipid
solubility - No longer accepted universally
- Does appear in different levels of CNS
integration - Molecular, subcellular and cellular mainly
7Current Views of Anesthetic Mechanism
- Solubilization within the neuronal membrane
- Redistribution of lateral pressures
- Alters conformation of membrane proteins (i.e.
Na pump) - Anesthetics interact with many hydrophobic sites
- Protein structures that form ion channels
8- Inhaled anesthetics act at lipid bilayer-protein
interface - Weak electrostatic forces between membrane
protein and anesthetic - Stimulation of K leak channels (neuronal
hyperpolarization) - Ca2 sensitivity to general anesthesia
9Presynaptic Inhibition
- Three mechanisms of presynaptic inhibition
- Mediating neuron causes Ca2 channels of
presynaptic neuron to close (lt release of NT) - Ligand-gated receptors inhibit NT release
- Ca2 independent (botulinum/tetanus)
- Activate GABA-A gated Cl- channels
- Also evidence that background K current (upon
anesthetic induction) hyperpolarizes both
pre/postsynaptic neurons
10Postsynaptic Inhibition
- Mediating neuron hyperpolarizes another neuron
- Agonist binds to postsynaptic GABA-A receptor
11Inhibitory Pathways
- GABA
- Key inhibitory NT within the brain
- Two types (A and B)
- GABA-A receptors increase Cl- conductance
(postsynaptic) - Analogous ligands (agonists) aside from GABA
interact with GABA receptors - Benzodiazepines, barbiturates, anesthetic
steriods, volatile anesthetics and ethanol
12GABA-A/B/C
- GABA-A individual expression of the GABA-A
receptor subunit composition and subunit isoforms
can modify response to anesthetic - GABA-B linked via G proteins to K channels
- ActivatedGABA-B receptors decrease Ca2
conductance and inhibit cAMP production - No KNOWN association with anesthesia
- GABA-C also ligand-gated Cl- channels
13GABA-A Receptor
- GABA-A receptors contain various subunits within
the predominate structure - 1-6 a, 1-4 ß, 1-4 ?, d, e, 1-2 ?
- 70-70 kDa glycoprotein
- Contains 12 hydrophobic membrane-spanning domains
- Two other GABA receptors (B and C)
14GABA-A Receptor
Voet and Voet 2nd Edition
15GABA-A Inhibition
- Increase in Cl ion conductance after activation
of GABA-A receptors by anesthesia - Causes localized hyperpolarization of the
neuronal membrane - Increased threshold to depolarize (to form AP)
- Increased conductance is due to an increase in
the mean open time of the Cl ion channel
16Formation of GABA
- Initial step utilizes a-ketoglutarate (Krebs)
- Transamination of a-ketoglutarate to form
a-oxoglutarate transaminase (GABA-T or glutamate) - Glutamate is decarboxylated to form GABA by
glutamate decarboxylase (GAD)
17Degradation of GABA
- Metabolized by GABA-T to form succinic
semialdehyde - Glutamate is regenerated if in the presence of
a-ketoglutarate - If not, succinic semialdehyde is oxidized by
SSADH then succinic acid returns to Krebs cycle
18Off Topic ?
- GAD is also present in ß cells of pancreatic
islets - GAD plays role in pancreatic endocrine function
- Insulin and GAD coexist in the ß cells
- Antibodies of the 64-kDa (GAD) occur in almost
all patients with insulin-dependent diabetes - Presence of GAD antibodies appear to precede the
clinical onset of the disease - GAD and development of Type-1 diabetes???
19Glycine Receptor
- Ogliomeric transmembrane protein composed of 3 a
and 2 ß subunits - Agonists ß-alanine and taurine as well as
ß-aminobutyric acid, ethanol and anesthetics as
well as strychnine - Isofluorane and propofol are also allosteric
effectors - Similar in structure to GABA-A receptor
- GLYT-1 and GLYT-2
20- Receptor consists of two polypeptide subunits
- 48 kDa (a) and 58 kD (ß)
- Glycine binding site is located on a
- Each subunit has 4 hydrophobic membrane-spanning
sequences
Garrett and Grisham 3rd Edition
21Glycine a-1 Transmembrane Domain
Protein Data Bank
22Glycine Receptor
Gar
Garrett and Grisham 3rd Edition
23K Background (Leak) Channel Excitation
- Leak channels influence both resting membrane
potential and repolarization - These channels are opened by volatile anesthetics
- Hyperpolarization of the membrane
- Suppresses action potential generation
- Partially responsible for suppressing the hypoxic
drive during general anesthesia
24Hypoxic Drive
- Lung damage
- Alveolar ventilation is inadequate
- Abnormal arterial blood gases.
- Chemoreceptors become tolerant of a high pp of
CO2 kidneys compensate for the respiratory
acidosis by retaining bicarbonate (HCO3 ) - Keeps arterial pH normal
- If Too much oxygen respiratory drive will be lost
- Not breathe adequately,
- Pp of CO2 in arterial blood will rise (loss of
consciousness)
25Disruption of Ligand Diffusion Chreodes
- A proposed mechanism of action for inhaled
anesthetics
26Diffusion ChreodesWhat the are Chreodes you
ask?
- Protein cavities are targeted by anesthetic
molecules - This disrupts the normal function of the protein
- Amino acids outside the active site act as
promoters - These chreodes created in the landscape of the
receptor are invoked to account for a type of
facillitated diffusion of a ligand to that
receptor - Exit of ligand from active site may be mediated
by another set of chreodes
27Chreodes
- It is believed that the viscosity of water near
the protein surface is higher (due to the
intermolecular forces between the amino acid side
chains and the water molecules) than the bulk
water - This ordering of layers of water could
facilitate faster diffusion of the solute
(ligand) near the protein surface - These paths for the ligand are always changing
until (over time) they continue to return to an
ordering that promotes fastest diffusion and
stability - A molecule could potentially disrupt the ordering
of water and amino acid side chains disrupting
the chreodes
28And Finally (I know youre happy) Chreodes and
Anesthesia
- Inhalational anesthetics (IA) are approximately
equal in size to the AA side chains - IA have lipophilicities very close to those of
lipophilic side chains - The presence of IA in or near a chreode could
alter the unique path adopted by the receptor,
disrupting the normal diffusion of the ligand to
the receptor
29Partition Coefficients of AA Side Chains and
Volatile Anesthetic Drugs
- Tryptophan 2.25 Sevoflurane 2.34
- Isoleucine 1.80 Phenylalanine 1.8 Desflurane
1.80 - Leucine 1.70 Halothane 1.70
- Tyrosine 0.96 Ether 0.89