Literature DB >> 9637648

Nonanesthetic volatile drugs obey the Meyer-Overton correlation in two molecular protein site models.

S A Forman1, D E Raines.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Nonanesthetic volatile compounds fail to inhibit movement in response to noxious stimulation at concentrations predicted to induce anesthesia from their oil-water partitioning. Thus they represent tools to determine whether molecular models behave like the targets that mediate in vivo anesthetic actions. The effects of volatile anesthetics and nonanesthetics were examined in two experimental models in which anesthetics interact directly with proteins: the pore of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor and human serum albumin.
METHODS: Wild-type mouse muscle nicotinic receptors and receptors containing pore mutations (alphaS252I + betaT263I) were studied electrophysiologically in membrane patches from Xenopus oocytes. Patch currents evoked by brief pulses of acetylcholine were measured in the presence of enflurane and two nonanesthetics, 1,2-dichlorohexafluorocyclobutane and 2,3-dichlorooctafluorobutane. Nonanesthetic interactions with human serum album were assessed by quenching of intrinsic protein fluorescence.
RESULTS: Both anesthetic and nonanesthetic volatile compounds inhibited wild-type and alphaS252I + betaT263I mutant nicotinic channels but displayed different selectivity for open versus resting receptor states. Median inhibitory concentrations (IC50s) in wild-type nicotinic receptors were 870+/-20 microM for enflurane, 37+/-3 microM for 1,2-dichlorohexafluorocylcobutane, and 11.3+/-5.6 microM for 2,3-dichlorooctafluorobutane. For all three drugs, ratios of wild-type IC50s to mutant IC50mut ranged from 7-10, and ratios of wild-type IC50s to predicted anesthetic median effective concentrations (EC50s) ranged from 1.8-2.3. 1,2-Dichlorohexafluorocyclobutane quenched human serum albumin with an apparent dissociation constant (Kd) of 160+/-11 microM. The ratios of dissociation constants to predicted EC50s for the nonanesthetics were within a factor of two of the dissociation constant:EC50 ratios calculated for halothane and chloroform from previous published results.
CONCLUSIONS: In two models in which anesthetics bind to protein sites, both anesthetic and nonanesthetic volatile drugs cause similar steady state effects with potencies that are predicted by hydrophobicity. These protein sites do not sterically discriminate between anesthetic and nonanesthetic drugs. However, differential state-selective actions on ion channel targets may underlie the distinct in vivo effects of anesthetics and nonanesthetics.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9637648     DOI: 10.1097/00000542-199806000-00018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anesthesiology        ISSN: 0003-3022            Impact factor:   7.892


  6 in total

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Review 2.  General anesthesia in cardiac surgery: a review of drugs and practices.

Authors:  Cory M Alwardt; Daniel Redford; Douglas F Larson
Journal:  J Extra Corpor Technol       Date:  2005-06

3.  Membrane structural perturbations caused by anesthetics and nonimmobilizers: a molecular dynamics investigation.

Authors:  L Koubi; M Tarek; S Bandyopadhyay; M L Klein; D Scharf
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4.  Distinctly different interactions of anesthetic and nonimmobilizer with transmembrane channel peptides.

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5.  Differential actions of isoflurane and ketamine-based anaesthetics on cochlear function in the mouse.

Authors:  Jennie M E Cederholm; Kristina E Froud; Ann C Y Wong; Myungseo Ko; Allen F Ryan; Gary D Housley
Journal:  Hear Res       Date:  2012-08-28       Impact factor: 3.208

6.  High-pressure crystallography shows noble gas intervention into protein-lipid interaction and suggests a model for anaesthetic action.

Authors:  Igor Melnikov; Philipp Orekhov; Maksim Rulev; Kirill Kovalev; Roman Astashkin; Dmitriy Bratanov; Yury Ryzhykau; Taras Balandin; Sergei Bukhdruker; Ivan Okhrimenko; Valentin Borshchevskiy; Gleb Bourenkov; Christoph Mueller-Dieckmann; Peter van der Linden; Philippe Carpentier; Gordon Leonard; Valentin Gordeliy; Alexander Popov
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2022-04-14
  6 in total

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